Whats with all the mis-information

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the prevalence of misinformation on the internet, particularly focusing on the attribution of quotes to historical figures and the challenges of verifying such claims. Participants express concerns about the reliability of online information and the tendency for falsehoods to proliferate in digital spaces.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Meta-discussion

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants note the difficulty in finding accurate scientific information online, with one professor claiming that 75% of web content is unreliable.
  • There is a specific example discussed regarding a quote attributed to Thomas Jefferson, which was actually coined by Howard Zinn, raising questions about the verification of historical quotes.
  • Some participants argue that the internet allows for the easy spread of misinformation, with individuals attributing false quotes to lend credibility to their arguments.
  • Others suggest that the problem of misinformation is not new and has existed long before the internet, citing historical examples of fabricated surveys and quotes.
  • One participant emphasizes the importance of checking sources and suggests that many reputable publications undergo rigorous fact-checking, contrasting this with the reliability of online content.
  • There is a discussion about the psychology behind why people might choose to misattribute quotes or spread misinformation.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on the extent of misinformation online, with some agreeing with the professor's claim about the prevalence of unreliable information, while others challenge the validity of that statistic and argue that much of the information available is accurate.

Contextual Notes

Participants express varying levels of skepticism regarding online information, with some emphasizing the need for critical evaluation of sources and others highlighting the challenges of verifying historical claims.

Pengwuino
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So yet again I've come upon another "famous quote" by a founding father on some persons sig that turned out to be fake and was actually termed by someone from only a few years back. Looking for people with something intelligent (or accurate to be exacty) to say as regards to science is almost impossible as well. One of my professors said 75% of what's on the web is total BS. My question is... why is this? What about the internet lends itself (if it does) towards massive amounts of disinformation and lieing?
 
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Pengwuino said:
So yet again I've come upon another "famous quote" by a founding father on some persons sig that turned out to be fake and was actually termed by someone from only a few years back. Looking for people with something intelligent (or accurate to be exacty) to say as regards to science is almost impossible as well. One of my professors said 75% of what's on the web is total BS. My question is... why is this? What about the internet lends itself (if it does) towards massive amounts of disinformation and lieing?
Maybe the same thing that makes it full of spelling and grammar like yours. :-p
 
Pengwuino said:
So yet again I've come upon another "famous quote" by a founding father on some persons sig that turned out to be fake and was actually termed by someone from only a few years back.
What was it?
 
*surrenders to the grammar police*
 
Someone claims thomas jefferson said "dissent is the highest form of patriotism". Turned out to be coined by some Howard Zinn a few years back.
 
Pengwuino said:
Someone claims thomas jefferson said "dissent is the highest form of patriotism". Turned out to be coined by some Howard Zinn a few years back.
How do you know Jefferson never said it, and that this Zinn didn't plagiarize him?
 
zoobyshoe said:
How do you know Jefferson never said it, and that this Zinn didn't plagiarize him?

searched archives of his quotes and the context of what the guy said a few years back makes no mention of our founding fathers or history in general.
 
Pengwuino said:
searched archives of his quotes and the context of what the guy said a few years back makes no mention of our founding fathers or history in general.
Contact the person who has it in their sig and ask where Jefferson said it. His "quotes" means nothing. You'd have to read every damn word he wrote to be sure he didn't say it.
 
Well I am sure he doesn't have a time machine or any other piece of equipment that makes him privvy to any information that we have. He won't respond as to where he got the quote.
 
  • #10
Pengwuino said:
Well I am sure he doesn't have a time machine or any other piece of equipment that makes him privvy to any information that we have.
I have no idea what this means.
He won't respond as to where he got the quote.
This is someone at PF?
 
  • #11
Oh god no, someone on some stupid gaming forum said this
 
  • #12
Quotes are tricky. Sometimes several different people have said different versions of the same thing. Sometimes one quote is attributed to several different people. Who said: "England and America are two countries separated by a common language." ?
 
  • #13
Well I don't think this was the case. Some websites were even citing this as a 'myth' and I couldn't find a website that gave the quote in its actual context or where/when it was said.
 
  • #14
Well, the only thing you can do is publically challenge that person to either prove Jefferson said it or stop attributing it to him.
 
  • #15
Pengwuino said:
I couldn't find a website that gave the quote in its actual context or where/when it was said.
I can't believe this! It's like the whole 'aunt' thing in the other thread. "On-line this", "On-line that". Why don't any of you ever look something up in a ****ing book and get the real facts?
 
  • #16
Danger said:
I can't believe this! It's like the whole 'aunt' thing in the other thread. "On-line this", "On-line that". Why don't any of you ever look something up in a ****ing book and get the real facts?
Look it up for us, Mr. Research.
 
  • #17
zoobyshoe said:
Look it up for us, Mr. Research.
Anything significant, I would. Who cares what some dead Yank said or didn't? The point remains that with the exception of subsidy publishers, who would stoop so low as to print something written by William Proxmire since the writer pays them, most things put out by a reputable publishing house have been researched and cleared by a legal department before publication. In the case of quotes, it's pretty much guaranteed that they're credible at least to the point of having been witnessed by one or more people. In addition, a lot of personal and public correspondence by historical figures exists in original form in some museum or private collection. That's where many quotes are gathered from, whether or not the utterance thereof was ever publicized.
Any web-site that you turn to as an authority could very well be controlled by a 10 year-old who still believes in the Tooth Fairy.
 
  • #18
The trouble is, as I said, you'd have to read every word Jefferson ever wrote to prove he didn't say one thing or another. Better to challenge the person attributing something to him to show where they found it.
 
  • #19
Ok how bout let's throw this back onto the topic i wanted it to be lol. In general, why is there so much BS online?
 
  • #20
Well, so far all you've presented is a obviously made up statistic by one of your teachers, and a complaint from you about one person whom you can't prove is wrong. As a matter of fact, most of the info I've looked up on the web has turned out to be perfectly fine.
 
  • #21
Im sure plenty of people on this forum would agree with my professor about most things on the internet beign a load of bs.
 
  • #22
Pengwuino said:
Im sure plenty of people on this forum would agree with my professor about most things on the internet beign a load of bs.
Now you've downgraded from a specific 75% to the vague "most". What is it exactly you're complaining about? The stuff people say in threads on forums? That's conversation, not reference material. You can't take any of that as hard fact without checking it.
 
  • #23
No, i don't mean to downgrade it, he said 75%. I didnt keep the percentage because... well, subconscious choice and i chose to say most, big deal lol. What I am complaining about is evvvverything based on any sort of "knowledge" that is on what we call, the Internet. Anything that attempts to convey the impression that they are telling you the "facts" is what I am talking about. Not conversations like this forum.
 
  • #25
See, what i want to know is why, at some point, someone would decide to put a quote with someone who didnt say it... maybe psychology would be a good major ;) lol.
 
  • #26
People are idiots. Plain and simple. It's the same reason morons take an e-mail quote (or even completely fabricated quote) and attribute it to someone else. People will do anything to make their point seem more justified, even if they are blatantly lying in the process. Others just take it for gospel and regurgitate it to others.
 
  • #27
This sort of thing has been going on since long before the Web. One notorious example was a "survey" that listed the top school problems in 1940 as talking, chewing gum, and running in the halls, in contrast with a list of modern school problems that included drug abuse, pregnancy, suicide, and rape. The survey was widely quoted on talk shows and in magazines such as Time and Newsweek. I remember hearing about the list when I was in public school in the eighties, many of our teachers talked about it and accepted it as true. It wasn't until 1994 that the survey was exposed as a hoax. It was fabricated by T. Cullen Davis, a wealthy oil businessman and fundamentalist Christian who in 1982 constructed the lists as part of an effort to attack public education. Mr. Davis admitted, “They weren't done from a scientific survey. How did I know what the offenses in the schools were in 1940? I was there. How do I know what they are now? I read the newspapers”.

I could only find one online copy of the article that exposed the hoax (the link is given below), in contrast to the hundreds of copies of the fake "lists" still being quoted everywhere around the Internet and in other places.

http://tafkac.org/collegiate/school_troubles_hoax.html
 
  • #28
There is whole bounch of factors that make the internet a socially interesting place - and equally many papers about it. At some point I thought I'd became a 'net-shrink' when I grew up and read some papers from this woman: http://smg.media.mit.edu/people/Judith/

Anonymity, accountability, contact networks, group-identity and other fancy phenomenons are all upside-down on the internet. A legilslation that is lacking behind new technology doesn't help either. A mix of these things probably has something to do with it.
 
  • #29
Joel said:
Anonymity, accountability, contact networks, group-identity and other fancy phenomenons are all upside-down on the internet. A legilslation that is lacking behind new technology doesn't help either. A mix of these things probably has something to do with it.
Here, though, you're diagnosing the cause of a problem based on the assumption, being perveyed by penguino, that BS is somehow worse on the net than off the net. Jma2001 has pointed to an example which suggests this has been going on from time imemorial, and isn't a new development made possible by the net. FredGarvin mentions Urban Legends. I don't believe the BS you can find along with everything else on the web is anything new, or that its worse than it used to be.
 
  • #30
zoobyshoe said:
Here, though, you're diagnosing the cause of a problem based on the assumption, being perveyed by penguino, that BS is somehow worse on the net than off the net. Jma2001 has pointed to an example which suggests this has been going on from time imemorial, and isn't a new development made possible by the net. FredGarvin mentions Urban Legends. I don't believe the BS you can find along with everything else on the web is anything new, or that its worse than it used to be.

Quite true and I don't know if the 'overal level of BS' is higher on the internet than it has been from time imemorial. However, I think this assumtions holds somewhat true; if a person acts anonymously, he cannot be held responcible for his actions and thus doesn't have nasty things like law and reputation to worry about, which in turn makes BS-behaviour more likely. I'm sure you've heard of more arguments of the like and I bet there are some quantitative studies of similar questions. Of course, it could just as well be that the 'overal amount of BS' is the same, but the BS is just worse than otherwise, or something else of the sort. I just find it hard to believe that the internet wouldn't affect our behaviour -somehow- and 'psychological truths' (like the one above) would suggest it's in some way negative.

Ps. Just speculating here, as you can see...
 
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