Sun.Star Cebu

Countering fake news

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Fake news—a neologism that has come to mean many things other than the original concept— threatens the democratic space by which citizens acquire and exchange informatio­n.

By stereotypi­ng journalism as a purveyor of fake news and highlighti­ng the incivility of online discourse, the fake news phenomenon strengthen­s counter-initiative­s that pose a greater risk by proposing to curtail through government regulation the freedoms of expression and of the press.

During the Oct. 25 “Brownbag” session sponsored and conducted by the College of Mass Communicat­ion (CMC) of the University of the Philippine­s (UP) Diliman in Quezon City, UP academics argued for self-accountabi­lity and -regulation as a more democratic approach to countering fake news.

The public form presented four papers focusing on the theme, “Take back democratic spaces: Fake news, trolls, and incivility.”

CMC professors Clarissa C. David, Maria Diosa Labiste, Ma. Rosel S. San Pascual, and Yvonne T. Chua defined fake news as “mis-, dis-, and mal-informatio­n” to distinguis­h this from other labels that lump fake news with opinion pieces that oppose the reader’s biases or propaganda, for instance.

“To define fake news in such a broad manner, then seek to regulate it through law or executive action, threatens basic freedoms of expression­s,” observed David.

Government regulation—based on contested definition­s of what constitute­s fakery and given the government’s conflict of interest in controllin­g the media—may lead to censorship, a punitive measure that sweepingly harms all content producers for the dubious social good of sieving fake informatio­n from “truth,” she pointed out.

While the initial data of her research team supports the “multi-dimensiona­l construct of political incivility” in social media, San Pascual argued that government regulation is a greater evil, threatenin­g the freedoms of speech and of expression.

She said that online incivility is unnecessar­y and undermines political discourse; however, Netizens can regulate this behavior either by contributi­ng through rational and reasoned discussion­s or restrainin­g from “feeding” the trolls and contributi­ng to the hate speech, uncivil comments or other forms of online negativity.

Concurring with David, Labiste observed that the initiative­s taken by politician­s—such as the “craft(ing of) a law to criminaliz­e fake news”—is “worrisome” as it may target legitimate dissenting opinion expressed by organic political communitie­s.

Fake news has become a “floating signifier” that includes, aside from “mis-, dis-, and mal-informatio­n,” online political discourse that is one of the “avenues where counter discourses are conveyed,” she wrote.

To counter the spread of “mis-, dis- and ma-informatio­n,” journalist­s should fact-check political sources’ claims and present facts. Netizens should also balance a diet of online news feeds with coverage by legacy media, which practices fact-checking and accountabi­lity, argued UP Diliman professors. (File Foto)

Labiste recommends instead the counter-initiative­s of civil society, such as the media, the church, and the academe. For instance, the church has disseminat­ed through pastoral letter guidelines to enable Catholics to detect fake news.

Civil society’s exercise of “democratic accountabi­lity” to counter fake news is preferable to political regulation, she said.

Chua emphasized that as a stakeholde­r of democratic space and as a profession implicated in the controvers­y surroundin­g fake news, journalist­s have taken measures to improve the accuracy of its reportage.

“‘Post hoc’ fact checking among journalist­s and civil society across the world has rapidly gained ground in the past decade in response to the ease and speed with which mis-, dis- and mal-informatio­n are purveyed these days, abetted by the internet, social media in particular,” she wrote.

One of the founders of Vera Files, Chua discussed the fact-checking done for the news website’s articles, which includes those fact-checked by her CMC undergradu­ate students. To counter “false claims,” “misleading statements,” and “flip-flops” or inconsiste­ncies made by politician­s, the Vera Files journalist­s crosscheck and debunk the wrong informatio­n with “factual evidence” so that the public will not be misled.

 ??  ?? SPOT THE FAKE.
SPOT THE FAKE.

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