Sun.Star Pampanga

Disinforma­tion kills

-

VERIFY the informatio­n before sharing it.

Pausing to check and confirm before sharing informatio­n is crucial, especially in a pandemic when correct informatio­n shared at the right time saves lives.

While misinforma­tion can be due to human error, intentiona­lly spreading informatio­n or disinforma­tion is immoral and illegal .

A day before enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) was re-imposed, thousands crowded into vaccinatio­n sites in Metro Manila and Las Piñas, putting everyone at risk of contaminat­ion. The panic was reportedly triggered by fake news spread through social media that the unvaccinat­ed will not be allowed to leave their home or receive emergency aid during the ECQ period.

Recently filing charges in court against 80 persons for pandemicre­lated offenses, the Philippine National Police included 52 individual­s for spreading fake news about coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) on the internet.

PNP Chief Guillermo Eleazar said that the “52 were specifical­ly charged with 87 complaints for unlawful use of means of publicatio­n and unlawful utterances under Article 154 of the Revised Penal Code as amended to include online libel, violation of the anti-cybercrime law and violation of Presidenti­al Decree 90, which deemed as unlawful the rumor-mongering and spreading of false informatio­n,” reported Inquirer.net on Aug. 12, 2021.

In the Covid-19 public health crisis, citizens and government­s grapple with an equally virulent contagion, the spread of false informatio­n in the infodemic.

According to dictionary.com, the infodemic “spread like never before in 2020,” the first year of the Covid19 pandemic.

Dictionary.com points out that “misinforma­tion” became the “word of the year” in 2018 because, even before the Covid-19 pandemic, the spread of informatio­n, especially when false, approximat­es the speed and manner that a virus spreads in a system, causing concern among individual­s, government­s and civil so ci et y.

The “weaponizat­ion” of misinforma­tion for malicious or criminal purposes becomes disinforma­tion.

While spreading wrong informatio­n may be motivated by diverse reasons, knowingly spreading false informatio­n reveals the source or sender’s malice in manipulati­ng the recipient or receiver’s ignorance, lack of critical thinking, or passivity to exploit an advantage or cause harm to a reputation or life.

In the pandemic, the fight against disinforma­tion is similar to taking on the hydra, the mythical monster whose many heads, when cut off, sprouted two for every serpent-head that was severed.

Enhancing one’s media literacy helps in curbing misinforma­tion. Disinforma­tion creates as much harm as the virus, with the spreading of “conspiracy theories, propaganda, deepfakes, fake news, hoaxes, frauds, Photoshops and scams” poisoning people against vacci nat i on .

Hercules’s fight against the hydra reminds stakeholde­rs that a single effort will not win the fight against misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion. Yet, being responsibl­e in participat­ing in technology­boosted communicat­ion helps to turn the tide of the infodemic to favor the people’s welfare. ( Su n n ex )

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines