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Jane's job is to report on false content; Mike helps people figure out what's credible.
Learn to sort through the many people, groups, and organizations trying to get your attention online
Mike demonstrates how to evaluate the reputation of an unfamiliar source
Understanding bias and agenda can help us make better decisions about what to trust.
Mike reviews the concept of domain knowledge and provides some tips to help us decide who to trust
What do we need to know about different types of claims before we start evaluating them?
How to ‘trade up’ to a better source when information comes from unfamiliar places.
Mike provides tips for checking complicated claims, including things we hear on social media.
Why you don’t want your news to come through a game of ‘broken telephone'
Learn how to follow the information trail back to the original source
Old information shared as current is a common form of misinformation. Here's a quick check to do
Learn how to find out where an image has been used, if it’s been changed, or taken out of context
What are algorithms and filter bubbles? And what happens when we all see different news?
What is ‘fake news,’ exactly? Better definitions can help us understand the problem more clearly
What happens when information is used as a weapon to divide people and disrupt democracy?
To combat false and misleading information, it useful to recognize the different forms it can take
How do algorithms track our behaviour and help determine what we see online?
How to tell fact from opinion
Professional journalists including Rosemary Barton and Althea Raj discuss why news media matter
The heads of three news organizations explain how issues and events become news
What are professional standards and how to they set news media apart from other sources?
A case study in investigative journalism
Learn how to use an image as a search term to learn more context about it
Learn to check claims and investigate who owns a website
Learn to check credibility signals for social media accounts
Keyword searching a headline or claim can tell you if a claim is true, or if it's been proven false
When you encounter an unfamiliar source, here's how to stop and do a quick reputation check
A reverse image search can tell you if a photo has been altered or used out of context
Influential research search shows that there is a lot we can learn from professional fact-checkers
The most efficient way to learn about unfamiliar sources is to check Wikipedia
To properly evaluate stories and claims, you want to find the person or organization who conducted t
Searching out existing research can be a shortcut to finding verified information
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