How To Consume Factual Weekly Community News And Entertainment

By Edward Carter


In the age of the internet, information becomes power and this why many people feel the need to be updated with current issues. Unlike before when the sources of current events are just the newspapers and evening newscasts, the internet can provide you what you need when you need it. The problem there is that information travels so fast even before it is verified. The following are ways on how to protect you from false weekly community news and entertainment being circulated online.

If you would like to know something, refer only to the trusted websites. These are being managed or owned by broadcast companies that care about their reputation and business very much that they take measures to ensure that what they publish are just the correct information. Many of the popular broadsheets also adhere to journalistic standards that require fact checking and balanced reporting.

Even if you know what the website of your trusted organization is, double check the address bar when you type the domain to make sure that there is not typographical error. Some individuals may have bought domain names that have typographical errors and may be using them to pose as the original site, except that the information published in them did not undergo the same fact checking process.

Using social media is also a quick way to get information from journalists since they can share this without having to write long articles that usually take time. When viewing reports on social media, refer only to the official pages or accounts of the broadcast companies. Look for the indicator that tells that the account has been verified to be owned by the agency.

You can also follow the verified accounts of the journalists, broadcasters and celebrities that you would like to know about. Not everything that they work on will get reported during the newscast, yet they are likely to share about these on their official accounts. Be wary though that if these are popular personalities, there may be fan pages and fake accounts that are easy to mistake for the real ones.

Information that you are unsure about may be cross checked with other sources. For example, one broadcast organization can claim about having an exclusive report about something, if this is something of importance, another journalist can find his sources and publish a report on it. There should be more that one reputable source of information to be certain that it is true.

In case you are having trouble finding another source of information or you could not judge the data yourself, go to websites or pages of organizations that do fact checks on popular reports. Find out if they have labeled the information as fake. If you could not find anything about it, there are times that they welcome suggestions on things that needed verification, so you may send them a request.

Sharing of information quickly is enabled by the wide and unlimited access to the internet. This could be a problem in determining if something is true since fact checking is much slower than just clicking on the share button. Before deciding to share something, take steps to check the facts and to look for signs of fraud.




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