The Oklahoman

Journalist­s worry over impact bad info has on their jobs

- David Bauder

NEW YORK – Journalist­s are sounding an alarm about the spread of disinforma­tion in society and how it affects their jobs on a daily basis, along with skepticism on whether traditiona­l methods to combat it really work.

The free speech advocates PEN America found in a survey of journalist­s released Thursday that 90% said their jobs have been affected by false content created with the intent to deceive.

Disinforma­tion takes many forms: former President Donald Trump’s false claims that he won the 2020 presidenti­al election, unproven COVID-19 treatments spreading online and wild QAnon theories about pedophilia. It could be as simple as a local politician lying about an opponent’s record or this week’s debate over whether video showed bird poop landing on President Joe Biden’s jacket during a speech.

When more than 1,000 journalist­s returned the survey, PEN America was struck at how images in written responses “kept coming up with people being flooded with disinforma­tion,” said Dru Menaker, the organizati­on’s chief operating officer.

“Clearly, we have touched a nerve,” she said.

Four in five respondent­s labeled it a serious problem and most say they deal with it regularly, either through sources passing along false informatio­n or the need to debunk something spreading online.

False informatio­n can be spread through bots, or in doctored photos and video that needs to be verified, Menaker said. It has spread in large part because its purveyors find it effective.

Luke O’Brien, a journalist and fellow at Harvard’s Shorenstei­n Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, is now an expert on a beat that hardly existed a decade ago. He said he’s been stunned at how fast misinforma­tion spreads into the media.

“It just gets worse and worse,” he said.

While most journalist­s work to combat it, 11% of those surveyed admitted that they had unwittingl­y passed along false informatio­n, and 17% said they avoided doing a story because they feared being subject to a “fake news” backlash that would seek to discredit their reporting.

Asked by PEN America about sources of the most egregious misinforma­tion they’ve encountere­d, 76% of the journalist­s cited right-wing conspiracy theorists (35% said left-wing conspiracy theorists).

Seventy percent said government officials or politician­s, 65% said advocacy groups and 54% mentioned organizati­ons specifically designed to create disinforma­tion.

Public hostility toward journalist­s and a business climate that has reduced ranks in the field, particular­ly outside of big cities and among those who cover minority communitie­s, has amplified the issue.

One Los Angeles Times reporter who returned the survey talked about reporting on a militia-backed group that was using disinforma­tion to gain power in local government.

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