Gold Dragon
Well-Known Member
I'll just run, and I mean run, to get my shots so I can be accepted in the general population, do business, not be called an uncaring criminal, and not be shunned.
Thanks for straightening me out.
I support people making good medical decisions with the best quality information available at that time. Do the research for yourself with good information. Talk to your doctors. Read the papers. Apply critical thinking. Use the brain God gave you to challenge your own biases.
Unfortunately we live in a world where algorithms allow people to profit by spamming the internet with misinformation that is much better click bait than the truth. And those algorithms lead those with a tendency to distrust evidence based authorities, like those directed by the bots you are talking about, to more of the same misinformation that they want to see to reinforce their incorrect ideas of the world.
Written in 2016 and the situration is much worse now
Scientific American : Fake Online News Spreads Through Social Echo Chambers
Sadly, I was not the only one with this idea. Ten years later, we have an industry of fake news and digital misinformation. Clickbait sites manufacture hoaxes to make money from ads, while so-called hyperpartisan sites publish and spread rumors and conspiracy theories to influence public opinion.
This industry is bolstered by how easy it is to create social bots, fake accounts controlled by software that look like real people and therefore can have real influence. Research in my lab uncovered many examples of fake grassroots campaigns, also called political astroturfing.
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Since we cannot pay attention to all the posts in our feeds, algorithms determine what we see and what we don’t. The algorithms used by social media platforms today are designed to prioritize engaging posts—ones we’re likely to click on, react to and share. But a recent analysis found intentionally misleading pages got at least as much online sharing and reaction as real news.
This algorithmic bias toward engagement over truth reinforces our social and cognitive biases. As a result, when we follow links shared on social media, we tend to visit a smaller, more homogeneous set of sources than when we conduct a search and visit the top results.
Existing research shows that being in an echo chamber can make people more gullible about accepting unverified rumors. But we need to know a lot more about how different people respond to a single hoax: Some share it right away, others fact-check it first.
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