How to Cure Viral Misinformation
Thereβs a huge amount of coronavirus misinformation spreading online. This is the story of one misleading post - including some tips on how we can all stop it spreading.
The World Health Organisation calls it an βinfodemicβ β a flood of information about the coronavirus pandemic. Amid the good advice and the measured uncertainty, thereβs a ton of false claims, conspiracy theories and health tips which are just plain wrong.
Weβve been working to fight the tide of bad info, and in this programme ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Trending reporters Marianna Spring and Mike Wendling trace the story of one specific viral post.
It's a list of supposed facts about the virus and what you can do to protect yourself. Some of the tips are true, some are false but relatively harmless, and some are potentially dangerous. Whoβs behind the post β and how did it spread?
Hereβs our list of seven key tips on how to stop viral misinformation:
1. Stop and think
2. Check your source
3. Ask yourself, could it be a fake?
4. If youβre unsure whether itβs true β¦ donβt share.
5. Check each fact, individually.
6. Beware emotional posts.
7. Think about biases
Presenters: Marianna Spring and Mike Wendling
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