whine less, breathe more,
talk less, say more,
hate less, love more,
and all good things will be yours.
~ Swedish proverb via Erskineville New South Wales Based Swedish Mafia Down Under ;-)
God sells knowledge for labour — honour for risk.
~ Arabic Proverb
Australia to expel two 'undeclared intelligence officers' as part of global action against Russia
Russian diplomats and misinformed redhead spies to be expelled from Australia
LAYERS AND LAYERS OF FACT-CHECKERS AND EDITORS
Best Views at Manly at The Australian Institute of Police Management (AIPM)
Social Media As Social Disease
This author moonlights as a professional cuddler
TaxProf Blog op-ed: Marinello – Curbing Abusive Exercise of Prosecutorial Discretion in Tax Crimes Cases, by Steve R. Johnson (Florida State):
On Wednesday, March 21, by a vote of seven to two, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Marinello v. United States, No. 16-1144. Marinello is an important tax crimes decision. It also is instructive at many points with respect to statutory interpretation, an enterprise fundamental to all areas of tax, civil as well as criminal.
But the core of the case transcends the particular statute at issue and the respective merits of various canons of statutory interpretation. The questions at the base of Marinello are as fundamental as one can get: the proper relationship between the people and their government and the proper relationships among the three branches of government. In my view, the Marinellodissent had the better of the technical argument as to statutory construction but missed much of the larger picture. The Marinello majority had a better sense of the whole and moved the needle in the right direction, but it produced an ill defined “rule” through dubious reasoning. So, two — not three — cheers for the Marinello decision.
Facebook groups have a spam problem
In
the fight against online misinformation, Facebook’s News Feed is typically
front and center. But an
investigation from BuzzFeed News found that spammers are increasingly using
fake groups to spread conspiracy theories, troll, hack and harass other users.
The tactic is a
global problem — and it could get worse. Given Facebook’s recent
announcement that group content will be given more prominent placement in
the News Feed, even more people could encounter misinformation.
(Screenshot
from the BBC)
This is how we do it
- The BBC has created a “fake news” game for kids that puts them in a newsroom in the middle of a breaking news crisis.
- First Draft has created a one-hour version of their online fact-checking course, especially for journalists, librarians, educators, students and “anyone else who uses information online.
- Zimbabwe’s first fact-checking organization launched this week. Here’s some background on the project.
This is bad
- Ars Technica calls out a bunch of media organizations that got the astronaut DNA story all wrong.
- In the Kenya elections, “weaponized” fake news has become a problem not only for Kenyans but for the U.S. government.
- Viral misinformation was rampant after a historically close election in Pennsylvania last week, including a fake judge, fake statements and fake illegal voters.
(Facebook)
This is fun
- This Seattle first-grader’s mom posted her son’s homework assignment on Facebook and pleaded for everyone to “practice this exercise in real life.”
- The Onion has a hot take on Facebook’s efforts to fight fake news: Make fake news real.
- An author of a study about the relative spread of real vs. fake news is concerned about the “over-interpretation” of the study, so he drew this diagram for clarification.
A closer look
- Wired explains why we cannot expect Wikipedia to fact-check the internet.
- Last summer, Snopes’ parent company got into a legal dispute over ownership of the site. Now, it looks like it’s making headway.
- ProPublica published a major correction, and how the correction was constructed — unusually detailed and transparent — got attention from media commentators like The New York Times, Esquire and The Washington Post.
(Screenshot from YouTube)
Coming up
- International Fact-Checking Day is coming up April 2. Here’s what to expect from the IFCN — and don’t forget to use #FactCheckIt on social media!
- You can register now for the Knight Center’s course on verification, led by BuzzFeed’s Craig Silverman. It begins April 9.
If you read one more thing
The
ultimate
fact check of the sources behind a study on the benefits of drinking
alcohol.
Quick fact-checking links
Poynter
received $3
million from Google to lead a fact-checking effort for kids, but it’s not
all new. //
We should be fighting misinformation with soft power — not censorship, Rasmus
Kleis Nielsen argues. //
After a school shooting in Maryland, repeat
hoaxes about the shooter’s identity circulated on social media. //
Salon points out research that says satire
and comedy can be a great defense against the effects of incessant lying.
//
The University
of Michigan opens a campus center dedicated to fighting misinformation.
//
Twitter,
look how you have, um, grown. //
This
London startup says their software can detect if even one pixel of a photo
has been altered. //
A California senator wants to see “a journalist or two”
on the proposed state
media literacy panel. //
Infowars is
reporting on fake news now?
// Meme factories seem to have switched from
soliciting shares
to likes.
// More than 400 schools in England received hoax
bomb threats this week. //
A lawmaker in the District of Columbia shared
a conspiracy theory that Jews control the weather. // YouTube
removed
a video from The Atlantic from search results for being “borderline” hate
speech.
// How about we stop
giving marketing free coverage? //
MarketWatch’s headline said that an increase in journalism
majors could be attributed to a “rise in fake news,” but it didn’t support
that in the story.
Until next
week,
Daniel, Jane, and Alexios