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designer bags cyber monday CBSN's Dan O'Brien joins CBSN to discuss.
CBSN's Dan O'Brien joins CBSN to discuss.
CBSN's Dan O'Brien joins CBSN to discuss.
CBSN's Dan O'Brien joins CBSN to discuss.
Dan O'Brien talks about how he and his father, Bob O'Brien, are trying to get the company out of the shadow of CBSN.
Dan O'Brien talks about the future of CBSN.
Dan O'Brien joins CBSN to discuss the company's financial results.
Dan O'Brien talks about the company's financial results.
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Fake news.
The first type, what we'll call 'deliberate fake news', is arguably the most 'fake'. This is the spreading of intentionally incorrect information (by bots or otherwise) with the goal of changing a societal outcome. This is the kind that has been disseminated on social media to change election outcomes.1 It isn't new, but has greater reach in a hyper-connected world.
The second type is not so much 'fake' as it is misleading or serving an agenda. This is not new in any way, shape or form. Propaganda and biased news is the result of unscrupulous reporting, or politically-aligned publishers.
Third, we have unintentionally fake news. False news spreads faster than the truth, but it isn't necessarily due to nefarious intentions. A study by MIT found that tweets containing misinformation go viral more than factually correct tweets, in some cases spreading six times faster and reaching tens to hundreds of thousands more.2 It isn't that people want to spread rumours, more that our human nature can make us more susceptible to believing juicier content.
As the fear of false information being spread online, particularly via online communities, has grown, so has the range of solutions implemented.
Twitter now requires users to confirm their identity via email or phone number to fight the creation of false 'spam' accounts.6 Facebook is experimenting with shrinking the URLs of hoax sites7 and expanding its external fact-checking program that lowers the visibility of inaccurate stories in people's News Feeds.8 Messaging service WhatsApp is limiting the amount of groups that messages can be forwarded to in an attempt to curb false news proliferation leading to political disturbances.9
It's also worth noting that Wikipedia has had a very different experience with fake news. Founder Jimmy Wales claimed that, "Wikipedia has had almost no problems with this at all, [...] simply because [it is the community's] hobby to debate about the quality of sources."10 Perhaps why YouTube has begun adding 'fact checked' notes below videos on its platform where the veracity of content is in question.11
In part this will mean focusing on being a trustworthy organisation, so that consumers have context with which to judge any content that comes their way. But it also means being sensitive to the way in which messages are being received in the market and crafting them appropriately.
designer bags cyber monday
designer bags cyber monday