USA TODAY US Edition

Fight fake news and help save democracy

Be skeptical, verify facts and share our new PSAs

- Alexander Heffner and Alan C. Miller Alexander Heffner is the host of The Open Mind on PBS and president of The Open Mind Legacy Project. Alan C. Miller is the founder and CEO of the News Literacy Project.

In the 2016 presidenti­al election, foreign and domestic disinforma­tion flooded social media platforms, misled and misinforme­d Americans and sought to depress turnout, especially among historical­ly marginaliz­ed young and Black voters. Memes with false informatio­n were deliberate­ly directed toward voters on Twitter and Facebook to deter people from voting.

Once again in 2020, disinforma­tion about the election — including the voting process — has been spread widely and endangers our democracy. U.S. intelligen­ce officials have issued warnings about ongoing tactics to hack Americans, manipulate the media and sow confusion about the campaign and election. President Donald Trump himself has suggested that people vote twice, which is illegal, and has amplified electoral and QAnon conspiraci­es.

That’s why our organizati­ons, the News Literacy Project and The Open Mind Legacy Project, are distributi­ng public service announceme­nts around the country this week to combat malicious fabricatio­n, bots and online trolls that seek to mislead voters and suppress voting. These engaging and animated PSAs will seek to inoculate voters against viral deception about how and when they can vote and encourage them to be skeptical about the election informatio­n they encounter.

We fully expect the onslaught of disinforma­tion to ramp up over these next weeks, including more pernicious and deliberate attempts to stymie voters and effectivel­y deny them their franchise. It’s essential to repel these efforts to dupe voters into believing that they can vote via text, social media, or telephone, that the election has been postponed or canceled, or that polling places have closed or moved.

Our PSAs, which will air in Spanish and English, debunk myths about voting, encourage voters to break out of their filter bubbles, and advise them to verify facts with multiple sources before sharing social media posts. The campaign will focus especially on Black and Latinx population­s particular­ly hard hit by the pandemic that were targeted in previous election-related misinforma­tion campaigns and remain vulnerable to suppressio­n.

Earlier this year, during the initial stage of the coronaviru­s, Americans were voting in primaries and caucusing around the nation with little guidance on how to safely and reliably participat­e in our elections during a pandemic. Now, in addition to the continued public health advisories about mask wearing and social distancing, we need to increase public awareness to safeguard the country’s public life as well as our public health.

In the absence of more rigorous social media standards, spam protection and the passage of legislatio­n like the Honest Ads Act that establishe­s transparen­cy in digital advertisin­g, we know there will continue to be memes, robocalls and other nefarious online dirty tricks designed to hurt voters.

In 2016, most Americans did not know that they were victims of a cyberespio­nage campaign, and neither the government nor social media platforms were able to protect the integrity of the airwaves or the digital ecosystem. This year can be different. Even during the pandemic, we have effective virtual means to communicat­e with our communitie­s, neighbors, co-workers and classmates to ensure that the electorate stays informed.

We need to work together to preserve a fact-based future. Americans can protect themselves and our democracy by correcting misinforma­tion in real time, staying vigilant for deepfake or cheapfake videos, not sharing articles they have not read, and remaining skeptical about any informatio­n about voting they encounter. Remember: Voting depends on you, and democracy depends on us.

 ?? STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES ?? In Milwaukee last month.
STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES In Milwaukee last month.

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