Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Media Social Networks

Snopes.com Exposes 4chan Campaign to 'Kindle Mistrust in Snopes' (snopes.com) 264

"This is the perfect moment to do this. This is an age of conspiracies for boomers... Let's kindle their mistrust in Snopes and other fact checkers," wrote one 4chan poster.

Snopes.com later reported: In October 2020, a series of threads was posted to the anonymous internet forum 4Chan as part of operation "Snopes-Piercer," a smear campaign with the stated goal of "red-pilling some normies" — internet slang for a propaganda technique in which distorted, fabricated, or skewed information is used to further a self-determined "truth." In order to "red-pill" these people (one thread noted that "boomers" were the primary target), the plan was to create and circulate doctored screenshots of Snopes fact checks to make it appear as if Snopes fact-checkers addressed claims that we had not.

Over the next few days, users created and shared these fake Snopes screenshots in a number of additional 4chan threads. These images were also posted on social media sites, like Twitter.... Some were humorous (we did not actually address the claim that CNN reporter Chris Cuomo was actually Fredo from "The Godfather"), some were insidious (we did not really publish a fact check questioning the Holocaust), and some were political (we did not publish a fact check questioning the results of the 2020 election before the election happened)...

These red pill campaigns all follow a basic formula. The user decides what they want to be true and then they set out to find, or manufacture, the evidence to support that truth. A concerted effort is then made to spread these false narratives to as wide an audience as possible in order to "red-pill" the general population. In this formula, the desired "truth" comes first. The "evidence" comes second.

It goes without saying that this method is antithetical to the mission of Snopes, fact-checkers in general, journalists, and anyone seeking an objective view of reality.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Snopes.com Exposes 4chan Campaign to 'Kindle Mistrust in Snopes'

Comments Filter:
  • Snopes are dopes (Score:2, Insightful)

    by groobly ( 6155920 )

    Snopes is extremely biased to the left on anything remotely related to politics, and indeed *should* be distrusted.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @12:19PM (#60646626) Homepage Journal

      Everyone has biases. The issue isn't how you arrived at your positions, it's how you *justify* them. Snopes tries to document its position using evidence, and therefore their arguments can be negated. Sometimes, like everyone else, they're wrong. But what's unusual about them is that then you can prove their argument is wrong.

      Saying, in effect, "don't believe these guys' conclusions because they have a different political orientation than us," well, that's an intrinsically *unassailable* statement. That doesn't make it a good argument though. People can take it or leave it entirely based on their prior assumptions, so it's good for lazy people.

    • by alexo ( 9335 )

      https://mediabiasfactcheck.com... [mediabiasfactcheck.com]

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by quantaman ( 517394 )

      Snopes is extremely biased to the left on anything remotely related to politics, and indeed *should* be distrusted.

      US Conservative politics is absolutely saturated with misinformation of all kinds (Global warming, evolution, COVID-19, etc, etc).

      Heck, remember a few years ago when Obamacare fell into a death spiral, the death panels euthanized all the elderly, Obama was proven not to be a US citizen, Hillary died of poor health shortly after the election (and her incarceration), and a terror cell launched an attack from the Ground Zero Mosque with help from Islamic terrorists who came with the South American migrant cara

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This post should not be marked as troll. Snopes does indeed apply poltiical bias.

      I do not like hypocrisy or bias, I do not lean right, I generally lean left, but not extremist nutcase left.

      Snopes has very much demonstrated some bias from time to time on a variety of topics and it therefore in my eyes, has gone from a gold star source of reliability to something I would in the very least question.

      This isn't about "they picked on my conservatives" (at all!) it's more misrepresentation of what one says and

  • by _xeno_ ( 155264 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @10:53AM (#60646314) Homepage Journal

    If you read enough fact checkers - Snopes included - you'll eventually come across examples of some extremely tortured logic to come to their final ruling. They'll declare things "false" based on a single definition of a single word, while admitting that the majority of the statement they're fact checking are true. They'll split hairs over numbers - for example, something like citing a claim that says "50% of people" and provide evidence that it's really 48.3% of people, and therefore the 50% statement is false. (Most annoying is when they admit that the numbers given were true for one sense of a word, and then use a different sense to completely change the numbers so that they can call a claim false.)

    The fact checking sites aren't necessarily useless, as they tend to gather a lot of sources together, but you absolutely cannot trust their "rulings" to mean anything. While there may be such a thing as objective reality, everyone's views are colored by their biases, and fact checkers are no exception.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The problem comes when Big Tech uses their rulings to punish what they deem "misleading information". Stossel found out the hard way what happens when you mildly go against the narrative [youtube.com]

    • by I75BJC ( 4590021 )
      I agree. "Fact Checking" has devolved to Ideology Checking. That is, I hold this position and this contradicts my Belief System. It's easy to see this if one hears, watches and event (or a feed of the event) and then reads/hears/sees the difference between CNN (and their fellows) vs. Fox News vs. YouTuber channels vs. the BBC vs. every other news source

      It's all strained through the filter of their respective Belief System filters.
      Then add greed and hungry-for-power into the fix and you have a real shi
  • disregarding snopes (Score:2, Informative)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 )

    ...comes from reading Snopes.

    I could post a dozen examples, but here's one I stumbled on recently (needless to say, I disregard Snopes as biased, so I don't really go there any more), a "fact check" on whether Australia violent crime rates went up after the gun buyback.

    https://www.snopes.com/fact-ch... [snopes.com]

    Snopes confidently and repeatedly "proves" that gun homicides have DROPPED since the gun elimination. All fully referenced and footnoted.

    GUN homicides.

    ie completely disregarding the entire point of the text.

    A

    • Snopes, as well as several other media outlets, also seem to have been spreading an incorrect (or misunderstood) definition of the phrase "red pilling."

      The phrase comes from the movie The Matrix and means to tell or expose the real Truth, particularly in cases where an Official Narrative or Commonly held belief is in direct contradiction to reality.

      Snopes itself is an example of a site which started out as an attempt to "RedPill" people regarding urban legends in particular.

    • I'll bite (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ixneme ( 1838374 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @12:11PM (#60646578)

      completely disregarding the entire point of the text

      I don't think I've been to Snopes since 2004 or so, but I decided to bite and see if you had a point. The text they are fact-checking was actually fairly specific in its claims:

      The first year results are now in: Australia-wide, homicides are up 3.2 percent, Australia-wide, assaults are up 8.6 percent; Australia-wide, armed robberies are up 44 percent (yes, 44 percent!). In the state of Victoria alone, homicides with firearms are now up 300 percent.

      Reading the article, I think they did a pretty reasonable job proving this false. There isn't great overlap between the cited research and the specific categories of assaults and armed robbery, but it seems pretty clear that homicides with firearms were not up by 300 percent.

      At the very end, there's a little snippet which was appended much later after the first posting of the refutation ...

      If you take out the introductory text, that "little snippet" is 39% of the Snopes text by word count. Presumably this was added to address questions after the first post? Not sure why this is supposed to be sinister.

      In fact, that "someone" is planting the idea that 4chan organized some effort to delegitimize Snopes is pretty damned suspicious.

      There you definitely lost me. Climb out of the rabbit hole.

    • You had a choice.

      You could have used Snopes' contact form to report an issue with that fact-check in the hope and expectation that they'd correct it.

      Or, you could have used this single example as a way to declare every fact-check ever done by Snopes is problematic, thus supporting your claim that Snopes is "biased".

      Which one is constructive, and which one did you choose?

  • Sites like scopes check claims, not facts.

  • Snopes routinely posts debunks and fact check determinations that are contradicted by the very content and evidence they reference. This is gaslighting. They rely on users to read the headline and summary without diving into the actual article.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by Gravis Zero ( 934156 )

      Snopes routinely posts debunks and fact check determinations that are contradicted by the very content and evidence they reference.

      Citation needed.

      • You could go for the Clinton draft dodging thing Snopes put out.

    • Then providing some examples should be really easy...

  • by bistromath007 ( 1253428 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @11:37AM (#60646456)

    if you weren't so deeply biased and intellectually dishonest that you claim "internet slang for a propaganda technique in which distorted, fabricated, or skewed information is used to further a self-determined 'truth'" is a good way to explain what people mean by "red pill," people might not decide to do this kind of thing

    • Kinda seems like "stop testing for covid-19" and it will "magically go away".

      • Amazingly if you stop testing for COVID cases you don't find COVID cases. No one is saying that the tests cause COVID. In fact, the US numbers look really bad because we are testing more than any other country (by far). Even more amazingly now that Europe is testing again they are hitting an all time high in cases (worse than the US). But no one wants to mention that, because the US is bad, right?
      • that's actually what we need to do to get rid of the "pandemic" because the only test we have throws too many false positives for it to have a mathematical possibility of ending if you're performing millions of tests

        • for the record, I DO NOT believe that the virus is fake, or that it's not dangerous, or that we shouldn't do anything about it, but our current approach is inherently broken and cannot end, ever, according to its current rules

  • internet slang for a propaganda technique in which distorted, fabricated, or skewed information is used to further a self-determined "truth."

    Nope, red-pilling means introducing off-narrative facts in order to get people to distrust the rest of the narrative.

    They figure out the bigger picture themselves. It's different than Leftist propaganda, which tells you exactly what to think in trope with the others. It's more like the Socratic method, in that it says, "Are you sure that's really true? How do you know.

  • As we've seen with the con artist, anyone who produces facts is immediately pounced upon for daring to spread the truth. Such as when the con artist says we're rounding the corner on covid-19 yet we hit a new daily high of confirmed cases [cnn.com] and deaths are once again at 1,000 per day. Or how the con artist continues to claim Russia didn't interfere in the 2016 election because he asked Putin who said no, Russia did not interfere, this despite a Republican-led investigation which corroborated every single item [thehill.com]

    • Trump lies or misinforms more than he does being truthful. Each lie is designed to glorify or enrich himself.

      It is Simpson level hilarious how his greatest support comes from the Evangelical Christians.. a group who has been warning about the anti-Christ for years.

      • It is Simpson level hilarious how his greatest support comes from the Evangelical Christians

        Going back to something I said yesterday, I'm still trying to figure out how "Christians" can support an adulterer who has had multiple affairs, lies, steals, and bears false witness against others.

  • Has anybody else heard of this way to assess the accuracy of a news reporting site?

    Pick something you're familiar with. Read an article able that something. Spot all the inaccuracies and errors. Realize that the news is probably about that accurate about everything. Despair. ;)

    Okay, I used to use snopes. Then I came across a fact-check about something involving firearms(which I'm familiar with). I think it involved internet sales of firearms. They rated it "mostly accurate" when nearly everything in

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

Working...