Learn news literacy this week ‘Deepfake defense’ | Taylor Swift misinfo | Pulitzer Prize winners
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The Pulitzer Prize Gold Medal is awarded to the news organization that wins the public service category.
The Pulitzer Prize, the most prestigious award in journalism, announced its winners May 8. This year’s awards included coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war and highlighted the importance of local journalism’s watchdog role. The Associated Press won two awards for its war coverage — one in the breaking news photography category and another in the distinguished public service category for its “courageous reporting” from Mariupol, Ukraine. AL.com, based in Birmingham, Alabama, also won in two categories — commentary and local reporting. The latter — about a police force that preyed on residents to inflate revenue — was watchdog reporting that resulted in four new laws. Among this year’s winners, the Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald and Mississippi Today were also recognized for local stories.
“The deepfake defense” — or falsely claiming authentic video is fake — is making its way into the courts in an attempt to capitalize on people’s skepticism of audio and video as AI technology advances. One recent example happened in a lawsuit against electric car company Tesla filed by the family of a man who died in a crash while using Tesla’s self-driving feature. The company’s lawyers suggested that an authentic 2016 YouTube video of Elon Musk might be a deepfake. In the video, Musk claimed that two Tesla models could drive with “greater safety than a person.”
Chinese authorities arrested a ChatGPT user for allegedly using the text-generating artificial intelligence tool to create a fake news story about a train crash that didn’t happen. It’s the first known case of a person being detained for violating a set of new regulations enacted earlier this year prohibiting the use of AI technologies to create harmful falsehoods. The man, identified by his surname, Hong, lived in the Gansu province, and his story had about 15,000 views before security officials realized it was fake.
NO: This photo does not show migrants heading to the U.S.-Mexico border in May 2023. YES: This photograph shows Honduran migrants on a bridge in southern Mexico trying to reach the U.S. border in October 2018.
NewsLit takeaway: Photographs depicting large crowds are powerful tools in the propagandist’s toolkit. An image of sports fans celebrating a team’s victory, for example, can be presented in a misleading way to make it seem as if a big crowd supported a political party or idea. There is also a long history of photos depicting large groups of immigrants being shared out of context in posts that use fearmongering language, such as “threat” or “invasion.” Social media users may be able to identify these false context photos by considering the source (was it posted by an account with a political agenda?) and searching for related news articles. A reverse image search is also a quick and easy method to uncover more information about an image. In this case, plugging this photo into Google Images revealed several news articles about a migrant caravan in 2018.
NO: These mug shots do not show the person who killed eight people at an outlet mall in Allen, Texas, on May 6, 2023. YES: They are genuine mug shots of a different person who has the same name as the shooter. YES: The incorrect mug shots were used to draw the actual shooter’s ties to white nationalist ideology into question and to spur baseless conspiracy theories that the shooting was a staged, “false flag” event.
NewsLit takeaway: It’s common practice for partisans to scour the internet following a mass shooting in the hope of turning up unreported information that can be used to support political ideologies, deflect blame or complicate the story. While these claims often end up being inaccurate and are subsequently debunked by fact-checkers, a first impression is hard to shake and those who encounter these false claims may be left with a skewed view of the incident.
These mistaken mug shots, for example, were initially spread to draw early reporting about the shooter’s white nationalist beliefs into question with counterclaims that a Hispanic person could not possibly be a white supremacist. But that isn’t true, and the real shooter, who was Latino, identified himself as a white supremacist, according to news reports.
Ahead of the one-year anniversary of a racist mass shooting at a Buffalo, New York, grocery store, three families of shooting victims filed a lawsuit against social media platforms. The families say that social media algorithms pushed racist, anti-Semitic and violent content that radicalized the shooter.
A Finnish newspaper is using online games to sneak credible, independent news about the Russia-Ukraine war past Russia’s state-controlled filters.
Don’t miss this riveting interview by a first grader asking a journalist about his job. They discuss where news comes from, journalism challenges, the importance of local news and, of course, remote-controlled cars.
Black Twitter, described by one professor as “the world’s largest Black group chat,” is being preserved by Archiving Black Twitter, a project launched earlier this year.
The hunt for Taylor Swift Easter eggs (or hidden clues) led fans to mistake a $45 untitled, unpublished book on Amazon as her memoir and turn it into a bestseller. (The rumored memoir, it turns out, is actually a book on K-pop superstars BTS.)
What’s the best way for news media to cover a presidential candidate who spreads election misinformation? It’s an ongoing journalism debate that was reignited by former President Donald Trump’s May 10 CNN town hall appearance.
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