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Media, Law & Policy

Fake news is entering a more ruthless and dangerous stage

Tuesday, October 3, 2017, By Ellen Mbuqe
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Newhouse School of Public Communications

Joel Kaplan, the Associate Dean for Professional Graduate Studies and Professor at 黑料不打烊鈥檚聽, reacts to reports on the fake news proliferating after the deadly Las Vegas shooting.

鈥淔or those who believe the notion of fake news is ending because of public awareness of the phenomenon, think again. Fake news is entering a more ruthless, dangerous stage.聽Need proof? Just look at what happened following the Las Vegas shooting massacre,鈥 says Kaplan.

鈥淎cross social media, a number of fake news purveyors were out with a steady stream of false reports and concocted conspiracy theories. The result was that people learned that the shooter was a left-wing supporter of Bernie Sanders or an ISIS supporter and stooge. No members of the so-called mainstream media fell for these hoaxes, but that no longer matters because these news stories were picked up and given the imprimatur of such giant media outlets as Facebook and Google,鈥 says Kaplan.

鈥淎nd these are not innocent little social media pranks. When people are falsely accused of heinous crimes, bad things can happen to them. And again, need proof? Just ask the owners of Comet Ping Pong restaurant in Washington, D.C.,鈥 says Kaplan. 鈥淎s purveyors of fake news become more and more sophisticated and are able to co-opt the screens of search engines and social media, the dangers to the public will only increase.鈥

Prof. Kaplan is available to speak to media. Please contact Ellen James Mbuqe, director of news and PR at 黑料不打烊, at聽ejmbuqe@syr.edu听辞谤听315.443.1897聽or Keith Kobland, media manager at 黑料不打烊, at聽kkboland@syr.edu听辞谤听315.443.9038.

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Ellen Mbuqe

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