Difference between revisions of "Fake News"
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|description="Fake news website" is a meme started after the 2016 US election, to disparage websites that dissent from the opinions expressed by {{ccm}}. | |description="Fake news website" is a meme started after the 2016 US election, to disparage websites that dissent from the opinions expressed by {{ccm}}. | ||
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− | The term "'''Fake news website'''", like the term "[[conspiracy theory]]", is a label used to try to discredit [[website]]s. It was introduced in November 2016, and subsequently linked to discussion of [[internet censorship]] | + | The term "'''Fake news website'''", like the term "[[conspiracy theory]]", is a label used to try to discredit [[website]]s. It was introduced in November 2016, and subsequently linked to discussion of [[internet censorship]]. When the [[Venezuela]]n government banned [[CNN]] from their country in 2017, they charged CNN with "fake news" production.<ref>http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/768284/donald-trump-venezuela-cnn-spanish-fake-passports-report</ref> |
==Official narrative== | ==Official narrative== |
Revision as of 16:28, 17 February 2017
"Fake News" (propaganda) | |
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Interest of | • 21st Century Wire • Mike Adams • Natalia Antaleva • Ingrid Brodnig • Carole Cadwalladr • Nick Carter • Ed Chau • Correctiv • DFR Lab • Lyudmyla Denisova • EU Disinfolab • Ida Eklund-Lindwall • European Journalism Centre • Yevhen Fedchenko • Full Fact • Brian Gerrish • Chris Hernon • Nina Jankowicz • Caitlin Johnstone • Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group • Dave Lindorff • Media Bias/Fact Check • David Miller • Alina Mosendz • NewsGuard • Ben Nimmo • Giovanni Pitruzzella • PolitiFact • Poynter Institute • Jenni Sargent • Rianne Siebenga • Craig Silverman • Snopes • Marianna Spring • Briony Swire-Thompson • Tackling Tools of Malign Influence • TruePublica • Donald Trump • UK Column • Dave Van Zandt • Melissa Zimdars |
"Fake news website" is a meme started after the 2016 US election, to disparage websites that dissent from the opinions expressed by commercially-controlled media. |
The term "Fake news website", like the term "conspiracy theory", is a label used to try to discredit websites. It was introduced in November 2016, and subsequently linked to discussion of internet censorship. When the Venezuelan government banned CNN from their country in 2017, they charged CNN with "fake news" production.[1]
Contents
Official narrative
On 15 November 2016, one week after the 2016 US presidential election, Wikipedia User:jfhutson started a page entitled "Fake news website".[2] Many commercially-controlled media outlets also started to echo the idea that the internet was full or Russian propaganda, and that this had influenced the outcome of the election. They have lead to calls that information on the internet should be checked for validity by expert "fact checkers", to avoid misleading people.
Problems
Who will fact check the fact checkers?... Apparently, dissent from the establishment's self-styled "fact checkers" will not be tolerated. The "fake news" meme appears to be being used by corporate media to try to discredit any sources who express dissenting opinions. Global Research, targeted as a "fake news" outlet, made the counterclaim that the New York Times was the "world leader in proliferating fake news".[3]
On December 29, 2016, Glen Greenwald accused The Guardian of "recklessly attribut[ing] to Assange comments that he did not make" that "those who most flamboyantly denounce Fake News, and want Facebook and other tech giants to suppress content in the name of combating it, are often the most aggressive and self-serving perpetrators of it."[4]
Deep political significance
Wikispooks was included on Propornot's list of 200 Russian propaganda outlets cited by a Washington Post article published under the name of journalist Craig Timberg. The article uncritically echoed the claims of this anonymous group, which stated on its website that it was "an independent team of concerned American citizens". It was widely criticised online,[5] prompting not a retraction, but the addition of a disclaimer by the Washington Post.[6]
Legal Significance
On 8 December 2016, Barack Obama signed the NDAA 2017 into law, which purported to legalize broad internet censorship. 21st Century Wire summarized the act by stating that “long before “fake news” became a major media topic, the US government was already planning its legally-backed crackdown on anything it would eventually label “fake news".” [7]
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
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"Fake news website" | “long before “fake news” became a major media topic, the US government was already planning its legally-backed crackdown on anything it would eventually label “fake news".” | 25 December 2016 | |
"Fake news website" | “The mainstream corporate media is desperate. They want to suppress independent and alternative online media, which it categorizes as “fake news”. Readers on social media are warned not to go onto certain sites. The intent of this initiative is to smear honest reporting and Truth in Media. Our analysis confirms that the corporate media are routinely involved in distorting the facts and turning realities upside down. They are the unspoken architects of “Fake News”.” | Michel Chossudovsky | 24 November 2016 |
Bilderberg/2017 | “Bilderberg is concerned about fake news? The world’s most secretive conference, which is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars keeping the press away from its sacred discussions, which has spent decades lying and obfuscating about itself, wants to ensure the spread of truth?” | Charlie Skelton | 2 June 2017 |
Josep Borrell | “Disinformation in times of the coronavirus can kill. We have a duty to protect our citizens by making them aware of false information, and expose the actors responsible for engaging in such practices. In today's technology-driven world, where warriors wield keyboards rather than swords and targeted influence operations and disinformation campaigns are a recognised weapon of state and non-state actors, the European Union is increasing its activities and capacities in this fight.” | Josep Borrell | 10 June 2020 |
Marie-Eve Carignan | “Early findings show that there really is a rapid uptake of different conspiracy theories, particularly in the United States and France. Similar theories about other diseases that took years to establish themselves only took a few weeks to take hold, super quickly, because people are absorbing so much information! That’s what’s alarming.” | Marie-Eve Carignan | 5 April 2020 |
William Casey | “We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false” | William Casey | February 1981 |
Consensus trance | “Nine tenths of the news, as printed in the newspapers, is pseudo-news. Some days ten tenths. The ritual morning trance in which one scans columns of newsprint creates a peculiar form of generalised pseudo-attention to pseudo-reality... My own experience has been that renunciation of this self-hypnosis, of this particiption in this trance is not a sacrifice of reality.” | Thomas Merton | 1968 |
Riam Dalati | “Sick and tired of activists and [Syrian] rebels using corpses of dead children to stage emotive scenes for Western consumption. Then they wonder why some serious journos are questioning part of the narrative,” | Riam Dalati | February 2019 |
Der Spiegel | “This week, Der Spiegel, the German news weekly, was forced to admit that one of its former star reporters, the award-winning Claas Relotius, “falsified his articles on a grand scale.”” | Robert Bridge | 22 December 2018 |
Event 201 | “Some governments have taken control of national access to the internet. Others are censoring websites and social media content, and a small number have shut down internet access completely to prevent the spread of misinformation. Penalties have been put in place for spreading harmful falsehoods, including arrests. Other countries have taken a more moderate approach and have focused on promoting fact checking efforts and working with traditional media outlets. Yet these approaches are limited in scope. Social media companies report that they're doing all they can to limit the use of their platforms for nefarious or misleading purposes. But this is a technically difficult problem and false misleading or half true information is difficult to sort without limiting potentially true messages. The bottom line is that members of the public no longer know who to trust. Both the misinformation and the measures to control it have led to a crisis of confidence” | 18 October 2019 | |
Event 201 | “I also think we are at a moment where the social media platforms have to step forward and recognize the moment to assert that they're a technology platform and not a broadcaster is over. They in fact have to be a participant broadcasting accurate information and partnering with the scientific and health communities to counterweight, if not flood the zone, of accurate information. Because to try to put the genie back in the bottle of the misinformation and disinformation is not possible.” | Matthew Harrington | 18 October 2019 |
“it seems every day we uncover information about how platforms like Facebook have used our personal data to target us with highly-tailored messaging that merges advertising for goods and services with political messages that reflect our interests and values through our online viewing reinforced by viewpoints we like and follow. This is exacerbated by a financial model that gives financial reward to content that is clicked and shared most widely.” | 6 August 2018 | ||
Freedom of speech | “Being right doesn’t entitle you to censor everyone who is wrong. That’s the central safeguard against tyranny, because even truth would be a tyranny if it didn’t allow opposition. Free speech – real free speech – has to include the right to be wrong, rude, stupid, offensive and a lying jerk. Because once you outlaw any of that – you’ve effectively ended free speech for all of us forever.” | 'Catte' | 26 February 2017 |
GCHQ | “Among the core self-identified purposes of JTRIG are two tactics: (1) to inject all sorts of false material onto the internet in order to destroy the reputation of its targets; and | Glenn Greenwald | 24 February 2014 |
Intimidation | “This is where we come in: deploying a multi-pronged strategy to
| 2018 | |
Věra Jourová | “Disinformation waves have hit Europe during the Coronavirus pandemic. They originated from within as well as outside the EU. To fight disinformation, we need to mobilise all relevant players from online platforms to public authorities, and support independent fact checkers and media. While online platforms have taken positive steps during the pandemic, they need to step up their efforts. Our actions are strongly embedded in fundamental rights, in particular freedom of expression and information.” | Věra Jourová | 10 June 2020 |
NewsGuard | “A new app claiming to serve as a bulwark against "disinformation" by adding "trust rankings" to news websites has links to a PR firm that received nearly $15 million to push pro-Saudi spin in US media, Breitbart reports. NewsGuard and its shady advisory board – consisting of truth-lovers such as Tom Ridge, the first-ever homeland security chief, and former CIA director Michael Hayden – came under scrutiny after Microsoft announced that the app would be built into its mobile browsers. A closer examination of the company's publicly listed investors, however, has revealed new reasons to be suspicious of this self-declared crusader against propaganda. As Breitbart discovered, NewsGuard's third-largest investor, Publicis Groupe, owns a PR firm that has repeatedly airbrushed Saudi Arabia.” | Anonymous | 29 January 2019 |
Charlie Skelton | “Bilderberg is concerned about fake news? The world’s most secretive conference, which is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars keeping the press away from its sacred discussions, which has spent decades lying and obfuscating about itself, wants to ensure the spread of truth.” | Charlie Skelton | 2017 |
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Rothschild TNK-BP Intriguers Drafted The Trump-Russia Report | article | 14 January 2017 | Yoichi Shimatsu | An in-depth analysis of a 35 page UK-sourced intelligence document purporting to discredit Donald Trump and prove Russian involvement in the so-called 'hacking' of the 2016 presidential election. |
Document:Staged ISIS Videos are the Plot of Iron Man 3 | article | 14 September 2014 | Jay Dyer | Predictive programming and fake news - an analysis of the ISIS 'beheading' videos and 'Iron Man 3' |
An official example
Name |
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Pizzagate |
Rating
This article tells how "Fake News website", a concept intended to increase trust in corporate media, became "fake news", which increased circumspection about corporate media.
References
- ↑ http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/768284/donald-trump-venezuela-cnn-spanish-fake-passports-report
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fake_news_website&oldid=749709748
- ↑ http://www.globalresearch.ca/fake-news-on-aleppo-liberation-western-media-lies-and-fabrications-the-words-terrorists-or-al-qaeda-are-not-mentioned/5562356
- ↑ https://theintercept.com/2016/12/29/the-guardians-summary-of-julian-assanges-interview-went-viral-and-was-completely-false/
- ↑ https://theintercept.com/2017/01/04/washpost-is-richly-rewarded-for-false-news-about-russia-threat-while-public-is-deceived/
- ↑ http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-07/washington-post-apends-russian-propaganda-story-admits-it-may-be-fake
- ↑ http://21stcenturywire.com/2016/12/25/2017-ndaa-obama-signs-countering-disinformation-and-propaganda-act/ 21st Century Wire , 25 December 2016