Daily Trust Sunday

Quick ways to detect and verify fake news online

- Hajara Hussaini

The birth of social media came with its advantages and disadvanta­ges. However, fake news existed before the internet but the era of social media has made it easy to spread fake news and aid its spread, even faster.

The urge to be the first to break the news has led even credible news organisati­ons to publish wrong informatio­n without verificati­on.

The era of social media has given untrained individual­s the power to break news and disseminat­e unverified informatio­n, that is later found to be either false or with the intent to mislead and instigate violence.

It is no longer news that some blogs and individual­s aim is to misinform and disinform their audiences to increase readership and engagement. In an era where reach and engagement convert to money, people will do anything for engagement and to gain visibility.

Informatio­n shared on social media travels fast and always makes its way to the offline space, thus increasing the spread of fake news in society.

Furthermor­e, it is important to know the difference between misinforma­tion, disinforma­tion and fake news.

Misinforma­tion is inaccurate and false informatio­n spread with no intent to cause harm; the sender believes the informatio­n is likely to be true, disinforma­tion, on the other hand, is false informatio­n spread with the intent to cause harm, deceive and manipulate the receiver.

While misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion are similar, fake news is a combinatio­n of both.

Fake news is the spread of misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion on a wider platform and making it seem like real news, fake news is more dangerous as it has the potential to reach a lot of people in different regions and it is purposeful­ly crafted.

In 2019, Wole Soyinka said that “fake news has become a threat to mankind, adding that it may cause World War 3.

However, note that there are other ways of spreading fake news and they include satire (parody), deepfakes and propaganda, among others.

Below are ways to detect and filter false and misleading informatio­n from facts on social media.

Some of the questions to ask yourself before sharing informatio­n online are;

Does the story sound too good to be true? Is the source of the story trustworth­y? Is it verifiable? Then check your biases and other sources and always look beyond headlines.

Any informatio­n that is not from a credible source, can’t be verified and sounds too good to be true needs to be checked before sharing. Some of the things that can be done to verify such informatio­n are;

Background check

This is important because some fake news merchants reference old articles, audio or audiovisua­ls and portray them as new informatio­n. They use trending issues to repurpose past informatio­n to suit the current situation and push a narrative.

The 2023 general elections in Nigeria can be used as a case study. Many parody accounts surfaced and old videos were repurposed to mislead the public.

Quick manual search

This can be done using Google by typing the keywords. In the case of pictures or videos, a search using Google Reverse Image Search can be carried out to find the real source of the picture or video and when it first surfaced on the internet.

Some people, blogs or news outlets are popular for the spread of fake news, a simple search will expose them as some platforms like

Facebook may have some of their content flagged as fake news.

Avoid articles with click baits

Click baits are one of the easiest ways fake news merchants and internet fraudsters use to gain access to their victim devices, they lure them into clicking to see more and end up on unsecured sites.

They misinform their audience and still gain access to personal and sensitive informatio­n on their gadgets.

Clickbaits can come in the form of misleading headings.

Make sure the informatio­n is from a verified source

There are lots of fake and parody accounts so it is vital to make sure any informatio­n you are about to share is from a verified account of a particle individual or news outlet to avoid falling victim to fake news merchants as well as fraudsters.

Parody accounts should not be taken seriously as their posts are not the person or organisati­on’s views or opinions they are imitating, it is strictly created for humour and deliberate exaggerati­on.

Just because it is trending doesn’t mean it is true and when in doubt, do not share.

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