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Fake News 'Crowding Out' Real News (bbc.co.uk)

The volume of disinformation on the internet is growing so big that it is starting to crowd out real news, the Commons Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee chairman has said. From a report: Tory MP Damian Collins said people struggle to identify "fake news." MPs in their committee report [PDF] said the issue threatens democracy and called for tougher social network regulation. The government said it plans to introduce a requirement for electoral adverts to have a "digital imprint". This would mean that all political communications carried online would need to clearly identify who they were published by. Labour said the government "needs to wake up to the new challenges we face and finally update electoral laws". The report follows the Cambridge Analytica data scandal earlier this year. The London-based data analytics firms and tech giant Facebook were at the centre of a dispute over the harvesting and use of personal data - and whether it was used to influence the outcome of the US 2016 presidential election or the UK Brexit referendum.

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  1. Definition by Nidi62 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I see plenty of people that seem to have no problem defining fake news. If it's inconvenient, shows them in a bad light, discounts their narrative, doesn't match their world view. Here's a convenient list of people using the "fake news" claim: Rodrigo Duterte (Philippines), Bashar al-Assad (Syria), Nicolas Maduro (Venezuela), Donald Trump (US). Some interesting company there.

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    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil