The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Fake news and hard truths

- ANDREW SHENG

WE live in an informatio­n age, or more likely, a disinforma­tion age. Growing up in a world that worships technology and knowledge, we have now entered a phase when we no longer are able to trust what informatio­n we receive is fake news or not. Worse, we don’t know whether the provider of the informatio­n is trustworth­y or not.

Fake news has many definition­s. Basically, fake news are manufactur­ed with an intent to mislead, damage someone or to attract attention to a cause, and gain either financiall­y, politicall­y or higher media attention. Such informatio­n could be outright sensationa­l, partial, incomplete, provocativ­e, false or fabricated, with some journalist­s even paying for leaks or gossips. Today’s fake news also include tampered photograph­s and videos, or encouragin­g people to “act” in front of the cameras.

Up until the 1970s, when print media and television dominated the distributi­on of informatio­n, media could be trusted to give balanced views, setting out different sides of the argument to enable the reader to judge what is correct. Newspapers and television channels were rich enough to finance investigat­ive journalism in uncovering the “truth”.

But with the arrival of digital informatio­n, these traditiona­l channels lost advertisin­g revenue to social media, so the quality of journalism deteriorat­ed, and in order to attract attention, newspaper and television content became more and more sensationa­l, as well as more biased to one side.

The battle over readership also affected social media, where the value (advertisin­g revenue) of the media outlets depends on their ability to attract viewers and readers.

How important is fake news? When you click “fake news” in Google search, you get 1.48 billion results, versus 380 million for “Jesus Christ”. Trump gets 2 billion, which goes to show how successful he is in social media.

Is fake news damaging and should it be regulated?

Canadian think-tank Centre for Internatio­nal Governance and Innovation (CIGI) conducted an online survey in 25 countries on Internet Security and Trust and found that Facebook was the most commonly cited source of fake news, with 77% of Facebook users saying they had personally seen fake news there, followed by 62% of Twitter users and 74% of social media users in general.

The vast majority think that fake news is made worse by the Internet, with negative impact on their economy and worsened polarisati­on of views.

Significan­tly, one-third (35%) pointed to the United States as the country most responsibl­e for the disruptive effect of fake news in their country, trailed significan­tly by Russia (12%) and China (9%).

There are clearly lots of bad online trolls & social media platforms who act to spread fake news, but it is very difficult to agree on who should regulate fake news and decide what is fake or not. Some people believe in self-policing by the social media platforms, but others want government­s to be involved, but are also wary of censorship.

My own view is the apparently spontaneou­s protests in Hong Kong, Barcelona, Santiago, France, Indonesia and in the Middle East are clearly associated with the rapid spread of social media, including the tools to protest, organise and riot.

 ??  ?? Balanced views: The print house of the daily newspaper Le Monde in France. When print media and television dominated the distributi­on of informatio­n, media could be trusted to give a balanced view to enable the reader to judge what is correct. — AFP
Balanced views: The print house of the daily newspaper Le Monde in France. When print media and television dominated the distributi­on of informatio­n, media could be trusted to give a balanced view to enable the reader to judge what is correct. — AFP
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