Where the evidence of fake news is really hiding | Eli Pariser | Big Think
There was some research recently into asking people to try to figure out which of two websites was more credible.
And they asked a group of students, a group of journalists, and a group of professional fact checkers.
Interestingly, the students and journalists both had a kind of mixed record, and the professional fact checkers did very well.
The difference in their approaches was significant because essentially the students and a lot of the journalists were looking at these websites, scrolling through them, looking at how they appeared, reading the content on them.
Whereas the fact checkers were looking around the websites.
So they were looking at where these sites are referred to on the rest of the web or what other experts in the field have to say about them.
Kind of all of the references in, rather than the references on, the web page.
Knowledge exists in a context, and generally speaking, every once in a while you'll find kind of like the brilliant idea or the brilliant finding that no one on the rest of the internet has discovered.
But mostly, smart people on the internet have discovered most smart things on the internet.
And so it's that process of triangulation, where you're looking for other experts who will validate that this source or this idea is credible, that is really, like, the critical component of figuring out what to believe.
People think, we all think -- and this is true with human beings and it's true with news or online sources -- we all think we're very good judges of who's lying and who's telling the truth.
But we're very susceptible to, you know, is it a beautiful serif font that it's presented in, or is it something that looks lower grade; is the person charismatic or are they stuttering?
These cues turn out not to have very much to do with what's credible or not.
But we're very susceptible to them, and so that's why sort of looking at who else believes that this is credible is a really important part of the process.