Chattanooga Times Free Press

FACT-CHECKING STARTS WITH YOU

- Larry Atkins, the author of “Skewed: A Critical Thinker’s Guide to Media Bias,” teaches journalism at Temple University and Arcadia University.

As news consumers, we’re swamped with informatio­n. Whether we read newspapers, watch cable news, or get stories from Aunt Judy on Facebook, we must decide which informatio­n is trustworth­y.

Advocacy journalism outlets including MSNBC and Fox News, ideologica­l talk radio, and conspiracy websites like InfoWars make this difficult. Was Trump snookered by North Korea? Will his tariff war hurt the economy? How we answer those sorts of questions may depend on where we get our news.

As the midterm elections approach, we must be prepared for another misinforma­tion onslaught from Russia. Media organizati­ons are taking steps to push back.

The Washington Post recently reported that Twitter has purged 70 million fake and suspicious accounts since May to reduce the misinforma­tion spread on its platform. Three days later, YouTube announced that it was giving $25 million to support legitimate news organizati­ons, flag misinforma­tion, and highlight authoritat­ive news sources.

Those actions reflect the emerging movement to help people become savvy news consumers.

Dozens of fact-checking organizati­ons call out falsehoods by politician­s and others. They include such well-known outlets as FactCheck.org, The Washington Post’s FactChecke­r, Snopes and PolitiFact. A report from Duke Reporters’ Lab this year counted 149 fact-checking projects in 53 countries.

The fake news fiasco of 2016 spurred public outrage and led to government action. According to Media Literacy Now, several states introduced or continued considerat­ion of media literacy legislatio­n in 2017 and 2018. In 2017, Washington, Connecticu­t, Rhode Island and New Mexico passed media literacy education laws.

Many universiti­es now have media literacy majors and programs. The State University of New York at Stony Brook created the Center for News Literacy in 2007, which teaches undergradu­ate students to use critical thinking skills to judge the credibilit­y of news reports.

The website AllSides provides differing perspectiv­es on major issues, sorting news stories from the left, right and center. By fall, NewsGuard will be launched to fight fake news by providing users with reliabilit­y ratings and “nutrition labels” for 7,500 news and informatio­n websites.

In May, Facebook announced plans to start a news literacy campaign by offering tips on how to detect fake news and by recruiting researcher­s to look for misinforma­tion on its website. In early July, Poynter.org reported that the WikiProjec­t will create news informatio­n boxes to help Google users judge the veracity of local news organizati­ons.

All those measures are important, but without individual responsibi­lity, they won’t amount to much. We still have a president who has turned a blind eye to the misinforma­tion issue. We still have countries and groups determined to shape U.S. public opinion through sophistica­ted lies.

Ultimately, the burden falls on all of us to be savvy news consumers and confirm the informatio­n in the messages that bombard us constantly. Don’t believe everything Aunt Judy sends you on Facebook; verify it by checking several news sources. When you see misinforma­tion, warn others.

Russian bots and trolls wanting to destabiliz­e the United States, Macedonian teenagers seeking profits, and misleading memes will be in full force for the 2018 midterms. They will set out to dupe you. Will you be able to sort out the truth from misinforma­tion?

 ?? Larry Atkins ??
Larry Atkins

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