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No, nothing will be fine — but could these misinformation games help at least a little? » Nieman Journalism Lab

No, nothing will be fine — but could these misinformation games help at least a little? » Nieman Journalism Lab
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Can disinformation be stopped? | Harvard Magazine

Can disinformation be stopped? | Harvard Magazine
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Technology companies testing anti-misinformation accuracy prompts developed by MIT research team

Twitch Isn t Overwhelmed With Far-Right Extremists, But It Does Have A Big Misinformation Problem

A protester takes a selfie in front of police dispersing the Capitol riot. (Photo: Tasos Katopodis, Getty Images) Twitch’s relationship with misinformation is complicated. In 2020, platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter grappled with their outsized roles in the creation and cultivation of conspiracy movements like QAnon. Misinformation troubled Twitch in a different way, but the platform emerged curiously un-plagued by a comparable extremism epidemic. Now, midway through 2021, Twitch is finally gearing up to combat misinformation. New York Times published a story about extremism on Twitch that overstates the scope of a much more nuanced problem, making it sound like a significant number of far-right influencers fled to Twitch after getting the boot from Facebook and YouTube. The story proceeds to only cite a small handful of specific streamers, one of whom appears to have given up on Twitch a month ago and none of whom have large audiences by Twitch standards.

Can WhatsApp stop misinformation without compromising encryption? — Quartz

March 6, 2021 On a jaunt through the darker corners of the internet, a conspiracy-minded reader might come across a fake news story claiming that 5G cell towers spread Covid-19. Alarmed, he sends the story to his family WhatsApp group. A cousin forwards it to a few of her friends, and one of them forwards it to a group of 200 people dedicated to sharing local news. As the lie gains traction, WhatsApp helps it reach more people more quickly but the app’s managers have no way of knowing. WhatsApp, the Facebook-owned messaging platform used by 2 billion people largely in the global south, has become a particularly troublesome vector for misinformation. The core of the problem is its use of end-to-end encryption, a security measure that garbles users’ messages while they travel from one phone to another so that no one other than the sender and the recipient can read them.

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