Difference between revisions of "Fake News"

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Fake News is a fairly new term given to certain news articles, web posts, pictures, etc.. that intentionally try to spread false information. This false information is usually aimed at damaging a large entity or famous person. Fake news became a household term during the 2016 Presidential Campaign as Donald Trump stated the term on a seemingly daily basis to discredit negative articles/ posts aimed at him.  
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Fake News is a fairly new term given to certain news articles, web posts, pictures, etc.. that intentionally try to spread false information. This false information is usually aimed at damaging a large entity or famous person, however anyone could fall victim. There can be many reasons to create fake news articles but the main ones are to discredit/damage someone or something and to make money off the spreading of the article itself. There are a plethora of ethical issues present in the context of fake news. Yellow Journalism and similar media practices have existed for centuries but the emergence of fake news specifically has ushered in new ethical dilemmas altogether. --insert thesis statement here--
  
== Origins of Fake News ==
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== More on Fake News ==
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=== History ===
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Fake news became a household term in late 2016 - early 2017 as the US presidential candidates, Hilary Clinton and Donald Trump, began to use the term in speeches and social media posts. Who coined the term first is unknown but the origin of the first fake news articles stemmed from a small town -Veles- in Macedonia.<ref>Wendling, Mike. “The (Almost) Complete History of 'Fake News'.” BBC News, BBC, 22 Jan. 2018, www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-42724320.</ref>
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=== Types ===
  
 
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== Ethical problems with Fake News ==
== Problems with Fake News ==
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Revision as of 19:43, 13 March 2019

Fake News is a fairly new term given to certain news articles, web posts, pictures, etc.. that intentionally try to spread false information. This false information is usually aimed at damaging a large entity or famous person, however anyone could fall victim. There can be many reasons to create fake news articles but the main ones are to discredit/damage someone or something and to make money off the spreading of the article itself. There are a plethora of ethical issues present in the context of fake news. Yellow Journalism and similar media practices have existed for centuries but the emergence of fake news specifically has ushered in new ethical dilemmas altogether. --insert thesis statement here--

More on Fake News

History

Fake news became a household term in late 2016 - early 2017 as the US presidential candidates, Hilary Clinton and Donald Trump, began to use the term in speeches and social media posts. Who coined the term first is unknown but the origin of the first fake news articles stemmed from a small town -Veles- in Macedonia.[1]

Types

Ethical problems with Fake News

References

External links

  1. Wendling, Mike. “The (Almost) Complete History of 'Fake News'.” BBC News, BBC, 22 Jan. 2018, www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-42724320.