The Prague Post - It's no joke: Across globe, satire morphs into misinformation

EUR -
AED 4.26578
AFN 77.570007
ALL 96.675378
AMD 444.582439
ANG 2.079638
AOA 1065.138878
ARS 1660.744286
AUD 1.764332
AWG 2.090786
AZN 1.970527
BAM 1.953282
BBD 2.340183
BDT 141.497599
BGN 1.953079
BHD 0.437892
BIF 3423.287132
BMD 1.161548
BND 1.50526
BOB 8.028616
BRL 6.213702
BSD 1.161902
BTN 103.047165
BWP 15.469059
BYN 3.949409
BYR 22766.334526
BZD 2.336788
CAD 1.620225
CDF 2880.638012
CHF 0.930278
CLF 0.028262
CLP 1108.755035
CNY 8.269697
CNH 8.306599
COP 4503.169354
CRC 584.746219
CUC 1.161548
CUP 30.781014
CVE 110.123043
CZK 24.362314
DJF 206.903286
DKK 7.467329
DOP 72.746225
DZD 151.383903
EGP 55.248903
ERN 17.423215
ETB 168.913631
FJD 2.628004
FKP 0.864159
GBP 0.865946
GEL 3.153611
GGP 0.864159
GHS 14.349502
GIP 0.864159
GMD 83.63104
GNF 10077.009995
GTQ 8.902524
GYD 243.085598
HKD 9.038943
HNL 30.492693
HRK 7.529736
HTG 152.034017
HUF 391.490316
IDR 19272.108718
ILS 3.810335
IMP 0.864159
INR 103.108903
IQD 1522.137853
IRR 48854.695951
ISK 141.407178
JEP 0.864159
JMD 185.970271
JOD 0.823521
JPY 177.253283
KES 150.013541
KGS 101.577556
KHR 4664.98649
KMF 491.334343
KPW 1045.393249
KRW 1654.031997
KWD 0.355991
KYD 0.968252
KZT 627.730809
LAK 25196.519839
LBP 104046.828132
LKR 351.586779
LRD 212.046656
LSL 19.947386
LTL 3.429749
LVL 0.702608
LYD 6.318855
MAD 10.588051
MDL 19.722576
MGA 5193.305449
MKD 61.599763
MMK 2438.369403
MNT 4178.460204
MOP 9.314353
MRU 46.412171
MUR 53.140411
MVR 17.771549
MWK 2014.7029
MXN 21.32842
MYR 4.897089
MZN 74.22604
NAD 19.947386
NGN 1709.20623
NIO 42.754886
NOK 11.593082
NPR 164.875463
NZD 2.008856
OMR 0.446593
PAB 1.161897
PEN 4.000343
PGK 4.877712
PHP 67.393631
PKR 329.105359
PLN 4.25397
PYG 8113.541051
QAR 4.236039
RON 5.094077
RSD 117.1338
RUB 94.612935
RWF 1685.926717
SAR 4.356915
SBD 9.560167
SCR 16.552957
SDG 698.669638
SEK 10.952425
SGD 1.505029
SHP 0.912794
SLE 27.086899
SLL 24357.07833
SOS 664.043999
SRD 44.315944
STD 24041.691818
STN 24.468458
SVC 10.166894
SYP 15102.225313
SZL 19.937299
THB 37.752448
TJS 10.805524
TMT 4.065417
TND 3.411902
TOP 2.720458
TRY 48.45338
TTD 7.889829
TWD 35.512343
TZS 2850.528589
UAH 48.180692
UGX 3990.855495
USD 1.161548
UYU 46.380213
UZS 13969.991657
VES 219.547408
VND 30618.396842
VUV 140.802077
WST 3.21849
XAF 655.112512
XAG 0.023543
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.139141
XCG 2.094001
XDR 0.812748
XOF 655.112512
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.656519
ZAR 19.940928
ZMK 10455.32065
ZMW 27.560354
ZWL 374.017879
  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.36

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    0.6900

    75.21

    +0.92%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    23.87

    +0.54%

  • JRI

    0.0580

    14.128

    +0.41%

  • SCS

    0.0100

    16.87

    +0.06%

  • BCE

    -0.1570

    23.133

    -0.68%

  • RIO

    1.3000

    67.55

    +1.92%

  • GSK

    0.0850

    43.585

    +0.2%

  • AZN

    -0.3850

    85.485

    -0.45%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    15.35

    -1.24%

  • NGG

    -0.4150

    73.465

    -0.56%

  • RELX

    0.2800

    45.72

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.26

    -0.09%

  • BTI

    -0.5400

    51.44

    -1.05%

  • RBGPF

    -1.0800

    77.14

    -1.4%

  • BP

    -0.3300

    34.64

    -0.95%

It's no joke: Across globe, satire morphs into misinformation
It's no joke: Across globe, satire morphs into misinformation / Photo: Giuseppe CACACE - AFP/File

It's no joke: Across globe, satire morphs into misinformation

Is a US state considering a tax on breathing? Is celebrating goals forbidden during the Qatar World Cup because that is "too gay?" Did insect repellent manufacturers recruit a Ugandan man for his mosquito-killing farts?

Text size:

Satire, parody and jokes packed with absurdity typically draw laughter, but around the world they are too often mistaken as real, prompting fact-checkers to debunk what they call a leading source of misinformation despite pushback from their publishers.

Several satirical outlets mimic legitimate media websites, often sowing confusion among readers with what appear to be typical news articles but are in fact fabricated stories.

Sometimes even with disclaimers clearly marking their articles as satire, many readers take them at face value.

"Satire can mislead more than you'd think," Shannon Poulsen, who researches the link between humor and misinformation at Ohio State University, told AFP.

"Given that I find new examples of people falling for it every day, I'd say it is a notable and consequential form of misinformation."

The humorous fiction often makes the internet erupt with laughter, but researchers are not laughing about its potential to fool the public, which sometimes includes media organizations.

- Debunking humor -

In September, during a live broadcast on France's CNews television channel, presenter Pascal Praud attributed to the country's energy minister remarks that were invented by a parody Twitter account.

A version of the article about the man with the "deadly farts", which AFP traced to a parody website, was published by the British tabloid The Sun and drew thousands of interactions on Facebook.

The one about the Qatar World Cup, published last month by the satirical section of Germany's Die Welt newspaper, was widely shared as authentic news on Facebook, Telegram and Twitter.

In the United States, stories by the popular satirical website The Onion are so often mistaken as real that online forums have sprung up to ridicule those who fall for them.

But despite such errors, satirists have lashed out at fact-checking websites for debunking their content.

In September, the Indian satirical website Fauxy served a legal notice to the Mumbai-based fact-checker Boom Live, accusing it of damaging its reputation after it labelled one of its articles fake.

Boom's editor Jency Jacob contends the action was necessary as many gullible readers were sharing it on social media as legitimate news.

"We usually avoid debunking satire as we believe it is a valid form of expression," Jacob told AFP.

"But we have done it when we felt it was created without adequate disclaimers and if the satire was widely believed to be true."

- 'Key frustration' -

Platforms such as Facebook and Instagram say they reduce the circulation, visibility -- and potential for profit -- of links that are labelled misinformation. But some websites peddling misinformation skirt the barrier by labelling their content satire, researchers say.

Still, the restriction has faced pushback from American satirical websites such as Babylon Bee, which last year accused Facebook of suppressing its content with a drastic decline in reach and engagement.

That followed a 2018 tussle over a Babylon Bee article flagged as false on Facebook, which researchers said highlighted the thin line between satire and misinformation.

"Satire should not be treated as misinformation -- that appears to be a key part in the frustration from satirical sites," Poulsen said.

"We should communicate the satiric intention of a message because it reduces the chances people misinterpret satire as real. But many satirists do not want satire to be labeled as they worry it'll make their content less funny."

- 'Evil twin' -

Last year, Facebook announced that it will add labels such as "satire page" to posts that appear in the news feeds of users to clearly differentiate them from real information.

Third-party fact-checkers working with Facebook, which includes AFP, can append their own fact-checks to the bottom of satirical posts for the same reason.

But the problem persists.

Last month, authentic-looking imposter or parody accounts proliferated on Twitter, pretending to be celebrities or companies, after it first rolled out a paid subscription service.

The platform suspended the service, known as Twitter Blue, but it was relaunched this week with what the company said was a stronger review process.

"Imposter content is the evil twin to satire or parody content," Philip Mai, co-director of the Toronto-based Social Media Lab, told AFP.

"Bad actors will often put some effort into creating look-alike content that mimics their real-life counterparts so that they can prey on users' inattention... We need to encourage the public to pause before they share."

burs-ac/md

J.Marek--TPP