Abstract:
Objective
The purpose of this paper is to illustrate that the current efforts to combat the epidemic of
fake news – compiling lists of fake news sites, flagging stories as having been disputed as
“fake,” downloading plug-ins to detect fake news – show a fundamental misunderstanding
of the issue.
Research Methodology
This paper explores the plummeting believability ratings in conventional news outlets, as
well as current efforts to combat fake news. These concepts are situated in the post-truth era,
in which news is upsold on the notion of belief and opinion.
Findings
This paper finds that, in combination with a general mistrust of all news, a fundamental
flaw in the system of clicks-as-reward allows fake news and other clickbait (on the Internet -
content whose main purpose is to attract attention and encourage visitors to click on a link to
a particular web page) to gain unobstructed virality.
Originality/Value
Fake news is a widely discussed topic right now. As this is primarily an issue of truth
violence and information literacy, library and information professionals need to understand,
discuss, and address this issue as one that is directly related to the profession.