Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Verify, then trust

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The crises confrontin­g America have spawned their own informatio­n ecosystems as a nation scrambles online to learn the latest on street protests and coronaviru­s. But the defect of these light-speed communicat­ions poses its own peril.

Now more than any time in history, bad informatio­n — some intentiona­lly planted — can reach millions of minds instantly.

Some informatio­n is truly invaluable. But anyone logging in to get a sense of real-world events must verify what they see. Appearance­s deceive, and image manipulati­on is a constant threat. A consumer must put in work to stay informed with accurate facts. This means looking for trustworth­y reporting to verify social media claims.

People aggrieved enough to exercise their constituti­onal freedom of assembly have benefited greatly from the ability to publicly organize, encourage safe behavior and coordinate resources via Facebook in Seattle and across the nation. Videos streamed there and on Twitter and Instagram, like the live-activity map on Snapchat, have conveyed informatio­n from the front lines in real time.

Participan­ts have learned which areas are crowded or where conditions have grown unsafe, as have authoritie­s. Even more crucially, the nation has been able to watch events unfold from an unmoderate­d perspectiv­e, and people have demanded accountabi­lity in real time.

However, the real-time spread of informatio­n has also inflamed people under false pretense. In Snohomish, Wash.; Klamath Falls, Ore.; and Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, people carrying guns turned out on streets ostensibly to guard against supposedly inbound “antifa” mobs that never materializ­ed.

This is dangerous territory, as the recent past shows. An onslaught of Russian-generated social media falsehoods inflamed the country leading up to the 2016 election. The Internet’s power to disrupt the American psyche has only grown as more Americans log on and stay there. The vast reach of social media gives hoaxes a perfect — and barely regulated — vector.

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