Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

FAKE NEWS AND ECHO CHAMBERS

- Dhrubo Jyoti

Mobile phones that have enmeshed themselves into our lives, the growth of online echo chambers and the dismantlin­g of hierarchy of news have all contribute­d to the growth of nativist, anti-immigrant sentiment and the rise of right-wing strongmen

THIS LARGER NARRATIVE OF DISINFORMA­TION, FAKE NEWS AND NATIVISM RUNS ACROSS THE WORLD, INCLUDING PLACES WHERE IT WOULD ONCE BE CONSIDERED IMPROBABLE FROM BRAZIL TO THE US AND FROM THE UK TO INDIA

In 2009, life was simple. You would get news from the newspaper or its online avatar, the political buzz from television channels or your cousin who knows someone who knows someone in the local MP’S office, and “Good Morning” or “Good Night” greetings over SMS on your phone. If there was something important, it had to come from a top media house, otherwise you risked getting snubbed by your grandfathe­r at the dinner table. Finding out the national anthem wasn’t voted the best in the world was a moment of embarrassm­ent.

A decade later, everything has gone wrong. Credible sources of informatio­n appear to hold little value anymore as people are buried under an avalanche of informatio­n – most of it generated by spam bots, skilful manipulati­on algorithms, or groups people working at the behest of political parties – and facts are lost in a sea of anonymous forwarded messages, and overnight mushroomin­g of “news channels” and “news websites” that end up confirming biases.

As a result, the biases and impulses that would earlier be shared in whispers in locker rooms have now grown into the deafening roar of street rallies, mob violence and family Whatsapp groups. This has made the world a morass of anti-immigrant sentiment, nativist attitudes and hostility for anyone who looks, feels or talks different.

This larger narrative runs across the world, including places where it would once be considered improbable - from Brazil to the US and from the UK to India.

More insidious has been the slow seepage of bias and hate into every strata of society – classmates openly spewing hate on alumni groups, neighbourh­oods refusing to rent houses to people of certain communitie­s -that fuelled white nationalis­t rallies in the US and mob lynchings in India. This has left minorities on tenterhook­s, anxious that they may become second-class citizens.

How did we get here?

The initial sign was the dismantlin­g hierarchy of news. It was convention­ally accepted the more important a piece of news was, the more trusted the source needed t o be. No more. Somewhere in the early 2010s, people’s trust in technology morphed into their trust of anything that their device threw at them. With more news outlets cropping up and more people coming onto the internet grid than ever, people were flooded with catchy headlines, and they latched onto the one that confirmed their bias.

This was aided by two conflictin­g and simultaneo­us events.

The first was the growing ubiquity of the smartphone that enmeshed itself into every hour of every day of our life. As phones became indispensi­ble, so did the “facts” it flashed. The second was, ironically, the rising democratis­ation of internet, which took away the entry barriers to the news business and ensured that two men in a corner room could churn out enough “content” to keep

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