IndianaLocalNews

BSU Prof: Beware social media as singular news source

(Sarah Welliver/The Elkhart Truth)

People have been trying to get the latest updates on the spread of the coronavirus since the start of the pandemic, whether that’s watching their local news on TV, listening to it on the radio, or reading the newspaper. However, many Americans and Hoosiers are getting unreliable information on social media.

Dom Caristi, a telecommunications professor at Ball State University, says a study from the Reuters Institute shows nearly half of Americans get their news just from social media. Caristi says that makes sense, with the amount of time we’re spending on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram going up during the pandemic. He also says that can cause a lot of trouble.

“The biggest problem with relying on social media is that there is no check in the system,” Caristi said. “Anything can get out there.”

He says one of the issues is that it can sometimes be hard to spot the difference between a reliable, legit news source and something with intentional false information. That’s why Caristi says you should take some time to think before sharing and posting.

“If you can only find the story or information from a single source, it might not be legitimate,” he said. “Anytime you’re getting any information from a single source, you might want to think twice before you retweet that.”

Caristi added that you should trust your local TV station, radio station or newspaper over “a website that was created yesterday.”

“People like to hammer the traditional media — newspaper, radio, television — but they sure get it right a lot more than the newer, less establishments.”

The professor also says you should be careful throwing the phrase “fake news” around, because it’s hurting the credibility of legitimate media outlets and journalists.

“If people come away from this thinking ‘well, you can’t trust anybody,’ then we have created a system that makes the news less valuable,” Caristi said.

He says some people like to use that phrase just when they don’t want to believe the news is true or that they just disagree with it.

Related posts

Woman pleads guilty to methamphetamine possession

95.3 MNC

Indiana Pacers to travel to Paris next season

Network Indiana

Michigan short-term rental owners may face new long-term costs

Chrystal Blair/Michigan News Connection

2 comments

Charles U Farley July 31, 2020 at 10:31 am

Sorry, but the mainstream media news has no credibility anymore. They have selectively edited, lied by omission, or flat-out lied for far too long to be taken seriously by anyone. I trust the local sources and the smaller sources a lot more than local stations that march in lockstep with the Pravda national media.

I’m not saying I blindly trust small outlets either, but a good rule across the board is to verify news until you build trust in the source. Dom Caristi seems to think the big outlets are automatically reliable, and he is flat out wrong.

Reply
Thor August 3, 2020 at 3:06 pm

Well, as a Prof at Ball State what do you think his political proclivities are; and why he’d want you to trust the MSM.

Reply

Leave a Reply to Thor Cancel Reply