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How does misinformation spread online?

April 11, 2016, Filed Under: Media & Information Literacy, Resources

Country: International
Language: English
Source: World Bank
Author: Walter Quattrociocchi,
Link: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/q-a-walter-quattrociocchi-digital-wildfires?utm_content=buffer228cf&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

In the run up to the 2013 Italian elections, a social media post exposing the corruption of parliament went viral. Italian politicians were quietly certain that, win or lose, they would be financially secure by taking money from the taxpayer. Parliament had quietly passed a special welfare bill specially designed to protect policy-makers by ensuring them an incredible unemployment package should they lose their seat in the upcoming election. The bill, proposed by Senator Cirenga, allocated an amazing €134 billion to political unemployment. The Italian Senate had voted 257 in favour and 165 in abstention.

The post caused considerable and understandable uproar. It was covered in several leading newspapers and cited by mainstream political organizations. But there was one problem: the entire story was fake. Not even a good fake at that. For those interested in Italian politics, there were a number of obvious problems with the story. First of all, there is no Senator Cirenga. The number of votes doesn’t work either, because Italy doesn’t even have that many senators. And the incredible sum would have accounted for roughly 10% of Italy’s GDP.

So what happened? How did such an obvious fake fool so many people?

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← Media literacy from the EU perspective: how to empower citizens with critical thinking towards the media? Consortium for Media Literacy (Newsletter April 2016) →
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