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How the latest technology and some healthy activism can curb fake news

The main take away from our research is that when it comes to preventing the spread of fake news, privacy is key

Fake news
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Bulk of the fake news generated on social media tends to whip up a right-wing agenda

Co-Pierre Georg, Christoph Aymanns and Jakob Foerster | The Conversation
The term “fake news” has become ubiquitous over the past two years. The Cambridge English dictionary defines it as “false stories that appear to be news, spread on the internet or using other media, usually created to influence political views or as a joke”.
As part of a global push to curb the spread of deliberate misinformation, researchers are trying to understand what drives people to share fake news and how its endorsement can propagate through a social network.
But humans are complex social animals, and technology misses the richness of human learning and interactions.
That’s why we decided to

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