Information Literacy

Information Literacy

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Trust in Isolation: the Real Threat of Generative AI - The Global Disinformation Index
Trust in Isolation: the Real Threat of Generative AI - The Global Disinformation Index
Taking humans out of the process and hiding sources behind text generation makes AI a greater threat in this stage of the information revolution
While most people across the political spectrum believe that digital disinformation is a problem, they also believe that they would personally not fall victim to it - despite studies proving otherwise.
emoving this human feedback loop by having no place for things like comment sections or public forum posts represents a sea change in the trajectory of our online landscape.
All of the generative AI products on offer today either sharply reduce or entirely remove the human feedback loop, to the detriment of the entire information ecosystem.
Since that sharply impacts the type of information that generative AI will produce, it is important - but currently impossible - to practise “trust but verify” with generative AI at scale.
·disinformationindex.org·
Trust in Isolation: the Real Threat of Generative AI - The Global Disinformation Index
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review
Publishing high quality interdisciplinary research that examines misinformation from different perspectives, from its prevalence and impact to the effectiveness of possible interventions.
·misinforeview.hks.harvard.edu·
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review
Main | Many Co-Authors
Main | Many Co-Authors
Many Co-Authors is an online platform designed to collect and share information on the provenance and availability of the data for all articles co-authored by Francesca Gino. Harvard Business School professor who had been found to fake data
·manycoauthors.org·
Main | Many Co-Authors
Fighting Disinformation Online | RAND
Fighting Disinformation Online | RAND
This is a set of resources that can help users combat the challenge of disinformation, gain greater awareness of the media ecosystem, and become more-savvy information media consumers
·rand.org·
Fighting Disinformation Online | RAND
Hamilton 2.0 Dashboard – Alliance For Securing Democracy
Hamilton 2.0 Dashboard – Alliance For Securing Democracy
"The Hamilton 2.0 dashboard, a project of the Alliance for Securing Democracy at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, provides a summary analysis of the narratives and topics promoted by Russian, Chinese, and Iranian government officials and state-funded media on Twitter, YouTube, state-sponsored news websites, and via official diplomatic statements at the United Nations"
·securingdemocracy.gmfus.org·
Hamilton 2.0 Dashboard – Alliance For Securing Democracy
Front groups - SourceWatch
Front groups - SourceWatch
Teachers looking to create "Lateral Reading" exercises can find a list of dozens of sites to use here. These are industry organizations, public relation firm-created, "non-profit" front groups designed to spread disinformation for clients
·sourcewatch.org·
Front groups - SourceWatch
Sam Wineburg on Twitter: "First, the good news: US Office of the Surgeon General has issued a Toolkit for Addressing Health Misinformation. This is a huge problem. I’m delighted they’re addressing it. But . . . 1/7" / Twitter
Sam Wineburg on Twitter: "First, the good news: US Office of the Surgeon General has issued a Toolkit for Addressing Health Misinformation. This is a huge problem. I’m delighted they’re addressing it. But . . . 1/7" / Twitter
Simple 7 post thread disables the Surgeon General's advice on bad information on the web. Teachers and students should see this as well
·twitter.com·
Sam Wineburg on Twitter: "First, the good news: US Office of the Surgeon General has issued a Toolkit for Addressing Health Misinformation. This is a huge problem. I’m delighted they’re addressing it. But . . . 1/7" / Twitter
The Russian "Firehose of Falsehood" Propaganda Model: Why It Might Work and Options to Counter It | RAND
The Russian "Firehose of Falsehood" Propaganda Model: Why It Might Work and Options to Counter It | RAND
In some ways, the current Russian approach to propaganda builds on Soviet Cold War–era techniques, with an emphasis on obfuscation and on getting targets to act in the interests of the propagandist without realizing that they have done so.1
Sometimes, Russian propaganda is picked up and rebroadcast by legitimate news outlets; more frequently, social media repeats the themes, messages, or falsehoods introduced by one of Russia’s many dissemination channels.
The experimental psychology literature tells us that first impressions are very resilient: An individual is more likely to accept the first information received on a topic and then favor this information when faced with conflicting messages
Put simply, our first suggestion is don't expect to counter the firehose of falsehood with the squirt gun of truth.
Three factors have been shown to increase the (limited) effectiveness of retractions and refutations: (1) warnings at the time of initial exposure to misinformation, (2) repetition of the retraction or refutation, and (3) corrections that provide an alternative story to help fill the resulting gap in understanding when false “facts” are removed
·rand.org·
The Russian "Firehose of Falsehood" Propaganda Model: Why It Might Work and Options to Counter It | RAND