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[return to "Protests become fertile ground for online disinformation"]
1. racnid+m4[view] [source] 2020-06-02 00:57:33
>>headal+(OP)
Stop treating Twitter as news. It's trash, bots, and trashy bots all the way down.
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2. JMTQp8+T7[view] [source] 2020-06-02 01:27:26
>>racnid+m4
With the recent protests it's been difficult to find local news coverage. But I found tweets, I found livestreams, but I couldn't find any reporters covering some of the most impactful demonstrations in my city in decades. In that moment, Twitter was critical.

There is a lot of bots and trash, but it has it moments where it is a wonderful tool. This is one of them.

Show me a believable bot that's going to fake a livestream of what's actually happening at the scene. There's far too much contextual information to fake it. I could identify the streets protestors walked down, the landmarks, the actions taken, the way the phone was temporarily thrown on the ground after a confrontation. Far too much nuance to fake all of that.

Faking a <500px low quality everything-is-burning but it's actually street lights picture isn't particularly groundbreaking when it comes to doctored images.

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3. aianus+J8[view] [source] 2020-06-02 01:34:22
>>JMTQp8+T7
They don’t have to fake it, they can just film (or filter through) 500 scenes and only retweet the ones that fit their narrative while discarding the rest.
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