Gossip Magazines, Wikipedia, Facebook … What’s the Difference?

In middle school, I learned: 1. How to set up my Facebook account 2. Wikipedia was not a valid or reliable source. Now, the thought of using Wikipedia has vanished and yet the cite that I once used to communicate and connect with friends across the states — is now where we search for important news articles? Something doesn’t seem so right.

The biggest question I have is: when did we abdicate our responsibility for gathering, investigating, and verifying news sources to sites such as Facebook? Growing up with a with a renowned journalist as a mother, a stepfather who was editor in chief of a top magazine, an activist stepmother, and a father involved in local politics, I was taught the only fake news that affected our society came from magazines that I would see online at the grocery store, such as US Weekly or the National Enquirer. But now, years later, the topic of Fake News has taken over my dinner table conversation.

 

So what should we do? It’s time for us take back our responsibility. Marc Zuckerberg, said in a CNN interview “We need to make it so that trolls can’t spread fake news. We can get in front of this.” But I think, Facebook can make their changes, so can Twitter, so can whoever — but it’s up to the consumers to find the truth. Check the website an article is from. Find out who wrote it, search who it is, and determine whether or not the information and sources are reliable and accurate. When it comes to the generation I’m a part of, we love instant gratification. An article on our newsfeed becomes the quickest way to grab a story. But it’s time we take a step back, become more thorough in our investigations of news stories and opinions.

Read more "Gossip Magazines, Wikipedia, Facebook … What’s the Difference?"

Beginning to Unlearn Outrage

After the shocking revelation that social media were used to influence Americans during the 2016 election, the specter of meme-savvy Russian agents has haunted public discourse. Today there’s a kind of arms race to identify and oust troll-generated content on platforms across the internet. In May and June of this year alone, Twitter suspended over […]

Read more "Beginning to Unlearn Outrage"

Where do we draw the line? The problems facing Facebook and Twitter in the age of authenticity.

In a recent effort to address potential anti-conservative bias and foreign influence on major social platforms, Facebook and Twitter, the two companies most senior executives were called to a series of hearings in front of a Senate committee. Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey appeared to address these concerns and the countermeasures […]

Read more "Where do we draw the line? The problems facing Facebook and Twitter in the age of authenticity."

Do You Believe Everything You Read?

For years, I’ve heard the phrase “you can’t believe everything you read”. Though this phrase originally applied to untrustworthy information in print media, in current times it’s most applicable to information shared via social media. Facebook has been at the forefront of this investigation of the spread of false information, which was put on the […]

Read more "Do You Believe Everything You Read?"

Beyond Facebook

The recent debate surrounding the “Fake News” circulating on Facebook has began to change the way we, as a society, consume our social media. Trump Says Twitter and Facebook Are Interfering in 2018 Election https://t.co/T4znGaaQbr — HillReporter.com (@HillReporter) September 5, 2018 This shift in the overwhelming quantity of shady sources circulating on our timelines has […]

Read more "Beyond Facebook"

Fighting the Fake

Amidst a world where social media sites track our every like, post, share and search, the publics’ privacy has never seemed less private. In fact, with the use of big data, bots, artificial intelligence and so on, the line between private and public has never been more blurred. We unknowingly ‘accept’ the terms and conditions […]

Read more "Fighting the Fake"

Fighting Facebook Fake News

Is the Facebook post you just read authentic news? It’s hard to tell. Start with the source it is coming from. According to Zuckerberg himself, “Some hoaxes can be completely debunked, but a greater amount of content, including that from mainstream sources, often gets the basic idea right but some details wrong or omitted”. Sometimes […]

Read more "Fighting Facebook Fake News"