• Skyrmir@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Misinformation campaigns are modern warfare. Killing your opponents from the inside is far more cost effective.

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    I had a weird recollection the other night.

    I remembered that back in 2012 during the Boston Marathon Bombing that there was a FUCK TON of misinformation going around everywhere. The Boston Globe reported that there was a bomb that went off in the hospital, and that all of Brigham and Women’s hospital was evacuated. And at the time, I was at my desk at Brigham and Women’s hospital.

    Like… The Boston Globe is a highly, highly credible news source. And here I was, maybe 10 miles from their offices, putting out stories that I could prove false in real time on Facebook.

    This isn’t to throw shade at the Boston Globe. They were certainly not the only culprit here. I just remember this distinctly…

    I don’t know quite what my point is here. I guess that there’s always been a lot of it misinformation? Maybe the degree to which we’ve become interconnected through a generations worth of smartphone use has brought not only the disinformation to light, but the problems it creates?

    It certainly feels worse today than it ever was, but as I look back on it I’m not so sure.

  • saltesc@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    It’s interesting. When you call out something as misinformation, you get attacked anyway because it’s “the agenda behind it”. It could be true, but there’s no facts, just the skewing or fabrication of facts to push that narrative.

    In a world where most people don’t make it past the headline, you best believe few look into what they’re reading to confirm its validity before running with it.