How false news can spread Noah Tavlin

There’s a quote usually attributed
to the writer Mark Twain that goes,

“A lie can travel
halfway around the world

while the truth is putting on its shoes.”

Funny thing about that.

There’s reason to doubt
that Mark Twain ever said this at all,

thus, ironically, proving the point.

And today, the quote, whoever said it,
is truer than ever before.

In previous decades,
most media with global reach

consisted of several
major newspapers and networks

which had the resources
to gather information directly.

Outlets like Reuters
and the Associated Press

that aggregate or rereport stories
were relatively rare compared to today.

The speed with which
information spreads now

has created the ideal conditions for
a phenomenon known as circular reporting.

This is when publication A
publishes misinformation,

publication B reprints it,

and publication A then cites B
as the source for the information.

It’s also considered a form
of circular reporting

when multiple publications

report on the same initial piece
of false information,

which then appears to another author as
having been verified by multiple sources.

For instance, the 1998 publication
of a single pseudoscientific paper

arguing that routine vaccination
of children causes autism

inspired an entire
antivaccination movement,

despite the fact that the original paper
has repeatedly been discredited

by the scientific community.

Deliberately unvaccinated children
are now contracting contagious diseases

that had been virtually
eradicated in the United States,

with some infections proving fatal.

In a slightly less dire example,

satirical articles that are formatted
to resemble real ones

can also be picked up by outlets
not in on the joke.

For example, a joke article in the
reputable British Medical Journal entitled

“Energy Expenditure in Adolescents
Playing New Generation Computer Games,”

has been referenced in serious
science publications over 400 times.

User-generated content, such as wikis,

are also a common contributer
to circular reporting.

As more writers come to rely
on such pages for quick information,

an unverified fact in a wiki page
can make its way into a published article

that may later be added as a citation
for the very same wiki information,

making it much harder to debunk.

Recent advances
in communication technology

have had immeasurable benefits

in breaking down the barriers
between information and people.

But our desire for quick answers

may overpower the desire
to be certain of their validity.

And when this bias can be multiplied by
billions of people around the world,

nearly instantaneously,
more caution is in order.

Avoiding sensationalist media,

searching for criticisms
of suspicious information,

and tracing the original source
of a report can help slow down a lie,

giving the truth more time
to put on its shoes.