The Denver Post

Elders are getting wise to fake news

- By Paula Span

Lindsay Dina wasn’t fooled by a photo on Facebook that supposedly showed masses of dolphins frolicking in the canals of Venice.

Dina, 75, ventured onto the social media platform roughly a decade ago, and has developed some savvy. She mostly shares informatio­n from establishe­d news organizati­ons. She has deleted posts making bizarre claims about Hillary Clinton.

She knows how to use

Snopes. com, the fact- checking site.

Still, she said, “I’ve seen things and thought, ‘ Well, that’s not true.’ ” But I wasn’t sure how to verify that it wasn’t.”

To Dina, a retiree in Easton, Conn., the internet can still feel like a hazardous place. Twice, online scammers have relieved her of small sums of money. She sometimes clicks on an apparent news story, she said, “but it turns out they’re selling some Medicare plan.”

A true- blue Democrat, she has passed along political stories from CNN and NBC but also posts from Impeach Trump, whose sponsoring organizati­on has earned poor truthfulne­ss ratings from PolitiFact.

So Dina was delighted to learn that MediaWise for Seniors, a project of the Poynter Institute, has offered free online courses to help older Americans detect and combat online misinforma­tion. She enrolled and begins her training in a couple of weeks.

The MediaWise digital literacy program, which began in 2018 with funding from Google, initially focused on teenagers and college students. Recently, said Katy Byron, the program manager, “we chose to make a big demographi­c jump.”

“There was a desperate need to educate this older age group, not only because of the election but because of the coronaviru­s,” she said.

The online behavior of older Americans during the last presidenti­al campaign alarmed scientists who study communicat­ions, politics and technology.

Consider what happened in 2016 on Facebook, the platform that adults over 65 are most likely to use. Researcher­s from Princeton and New York University determined that sharing articles from “fake news” sources — outlets that propagate false or misleading content masqueradi­ng as legitimate news — was rare.

But those who did engage with such outlets were far more likely to be older than 65. That cohort shared twice as many articles from phony sites as 45- to 65year- olds and nearly seven times as many articles as the youngest group.

A study of Twitter during the final month of the 2016 campaign similarly found that fake news purveyors amounted to a small share of all the political sources in an individual’s feed — about 1%. But older users were much more likely to engage with fake sources, and those over 50 were overrepres­ented among the “supershare­rs” responsibl­e for disseminat­ing 80% of fake content.

Such findings stirred particular concern because older adults are far more likely to register and vote than younger cohorts. In the 2016 election, more than 70% of people over 65 cast ballots, compared with about 46% of those 18 to 29.

“They have an outsized effect on our democracy,” Nadia Brashier, a psychologi­st and neuroscien­tist at Harvard University said of older adults.

And that group is at highest risk for illness from the coronaviru­s, a subject also generating lots of online distortion and conspiracy theories.

Brashier rejects the notion that older people’s participat­ion in misinforma­tion stems from agerelated cognitive losses. “Outside the social media environmen­t, we often see that older adults are more discerning than younger ones,” she said, pointing to studies showing that older people could more accurately distinguis­h false headlines and articles from true ones.

Moreover, Brashier said, “older adults have a lot more knowledge, facts about the world, especially political facts.” That helps them resist false claims that contradict what they know, she said.

But on social media platforms, it’s a different story. Although many older adults use those platforms quite adeptly, Brashier said, “there seems to be something specific about scrolling through Facebook or Twitter” that makes them more vulnerable to misinforma­tion.

Why might that be? Jeff Hancock, a psychologi­st at Stanford University, noted that many older users had flocked to such sites only within the past five or six years. “Online, they have a lot less experience and are less likely to know what’s dangerous,” he said. “These are extraordin­arily complex mechanisms that use machine learning — sophistica­ted technology — with billions of new inputs every day. There’s a learning process.”

Besides, “they were targets,” Hancock said of older users. As an experiment, he regularly asks the 80 undergradu­ates and grad students in his “Truth, Trust and Tech” course to spend 15 minutes looking for misinforma­tion in their social media feeds, primarily Instagram, a platform with a young demographi­c. They find very little.

But political organizati­ons, foreign propagandi­sts and financial fraudsters have all come after seniors, who are more politicall­y engaged than younger groups and control more wealth as well. Studies have also shown that they are generally more trusting.

One could argue that the task of stemming online deception should fall to the extremely profitable tech companies. “The platforms need to do more,” said Byron of MediaWise. “A whackamole approach is not enough.”

In the meantime, digital literacy organizati­ons are quickly ramping up efforts to inoculate older Americans against misinforma­tion. Early research has shown that such interventi­ons can improve people’s ability to distinguis­h between mainstream news headlines and false news.

The MediaWise for Seniors program will offer two free online courses, funded in large part by, well, Facebook. The first four- week course has already filled up, but students can still enroll in a self- directed course on separating online fact from fiction. Hosted by Christiane Amanpour and Joan Lunden, it is scheduled to begin Oct. 1.

“By the end, they’ll be using the techniques used by fact checkers across the world,” including reverse image searches to determine the sources of photos and videos, said Alex Mahadevan, senior multimedia reporter at Poynter.

In addition, Poynter has worked with AARP to produce Fact Tracker interactiv­e videos on spotting and filtering misinforma­tion.

The News Literacy Project is also expanding beyond its initial target audience of middle and high school students.

A weekly newsletter, Get

Smart About News, will take aim at current rumors, hoaxes and conspiracy theories, starting Sept. 22. In a game app called Informable, players advance through increasing­ly challengin­g levels to develop fact- checking and other digital literacy skills. Simultaneo­usly, public service ads will appear on radio and TV stations and on Facebook.

Although all of these efforts remain small in scale, their supporters say they can quickly be expanded to reach larger audiences. They hope that once educated, their older graduates will be able not only to counter online manipulati­on but to persuade other seniors to join the fight.

“We can send them out as ambassador­s in their communitie­s,” Mahadevan said. “When they go to church and hear someone talk about the latest meme, they can say, ‘ You might want to think about that for a moment.’ ”

 ?? Desiree Rios, © The New York Times Co. ?? Lindsay Dina, who takes an online course that helps older people spot online misinforma­tion, at her home in Easton, Conn., on Sept. 9.
Desiree Rios, © The New York Times Co. Lindsay Dina, who takes an online course that helps older people spot online misinforma­tion, at her home in Easton, Conn., on Sept. 9.

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