Maxim Shipenkov/EPA/AAP
More than 5,000 documents were leaked by an anonymous whistleblower.
This is a fake AI-generated image.
Daniel Kempe via Twitter/Midjourney
AI tools are now generating content that’s difficult to distinguish from reality.
Which is it?
Anton Melnyk/iStock via Getty Images Plus
A philosopher unpacks the ‘ethics of belief’ for an age awash in bad information.
Balloon sellers during the Muslim celebrations of Eid al-Fitr.
Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA
Local journalism should be recognised as an essential element for nurturing the UK’s diverse, civic communities.
A protection that is, at least in this Philadelphia park, carved in stone.
Zakarie Faibis via Wikimedia Commons
‘Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech.’ It’s often misunderstood, by many Americans. A constitutional scholar explains what it really boils down to.
Beset by advertisements and noxious information, our attention is increasingly fractured.
Shutterstock
Lateral reading, self-nudging and a persistent refusal to feed the trolls are some of the ways one can better manage information.
Don’t believe the hype about Bigfoot, a flat Earth or ancient aliens.
Collage from Getty Images sources
A university course teaches students why people believe false and evidence-starved claims, to show them how to determine what’s accurate and real and what’s neither.
Understanding our confirmation biases can help us tackle fake news and misinformation.
(Shutterstock)
Teaching students about information literacy can help them determine what kinds of practices make news reports trustworthy.
Fake reviews of products and services are rampant online – and are often hard to pick out from the real ones.
anyaberkut/iStock/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images
Online reviews have a big impact on buying decisions – but how can shoppers sort the real ones from the fakes?
It’s safe to say that Elon Musk has transformed Twitter.
Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images
The intersection of content management, misinformation, aggregated data about human behavior and crowdsourcing shows how fragile Twitter is and what would be lost with the platform’s demise.
A man holding a Q sign waits in line to enter a Donald Trump rally in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., in 2018.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP, Matt Rourke
The key to understanding online conspiracy theorists is to understand how the line between fantasy and reality can become blurred.
For the first time, we are asking readers if they can help support our mission to share knowledge in order to inform decisions.
Andrew Harnik/AP
Written in a breezy and accessible style, How to Stage a Coup is a dazzling compendium of underhanded tactics.
Local people in Papua perform a traditional dance in the Sentani Lake Festival.
Antara Foto
Our new paper shows how Indonesian-language disinformation promoting government narratives on special autonomy has swamped Twitter since February 2021.
Emotions can get in the way of knowing what’s true.
Elva Etienne/Moment via Getty Images
What’s true and what’s not? An expert in media literacy explains how to evaluate information.
Lutsenko_Oleksandr/Shutterstock
The disinformation age is changing what it means to produce fair or balanced reporting.
Get a shot of preparation and protect yourself from malicious information warriors.
boonchai wedmakawand/Moment via Getty Images
As elections approach – and even after they’re done – there’s a lot of confusing, and deliberately misleading, information out there. Learn how to protect yourself.
Media literacy can help you tell the difference between real and false news.
Zbynek Pospisil/iStock via Getty Images Plus
Researchers identified a connection between low levels of media literacy and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in people who consume their news via social media.
Citizens’ social media platforms are powered by open-source software.
(Shutterstock)
Citizens’ social media is a form of alternative media that challenges both mainstream media and right-wing propaganda.
A Ukrainian serviceman inspects a classroom with a sign ‘Z’ on the door used by Russian forces in the retaken area of Kapitolivka, Ukraine, Sept. 25, 2022. Russian President Vladimir Putin spread an outlandish conspiracy theory to justify military invasion of Ukraine.
(AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)
Many conspiracy theories and disinformation are rooted in antisemitic tropes which spread harm and undermine our democratic institutions.