Core mechanics of disinformation

Fact or Fake? How Users Evaluate Information
Stage 1 — The user determines if the content is interesting
Stage 2 — The user checks the information source
Stage 3 — Attention to details: presentation style and time of publication
Stage 4 — The user compares it with their own experience
Stage 5 — The user decides whether the news is credible
There are three criteria for determining whether news is fake or reliable: emotions, quality of presentation, and level of trust in the information source.
Mechanics and methods of disinformation
- Fabrication and forgery — fake documents, manipulation of audio/video materials, copies of media and government websites, photoshop and deepfakes.
- Clickbait — provocative and manipulative techniques in digital environment aimed at attracting attention and generating traffic.
- False conclusions — distortion of context, incorrect use of visual materials, violation of logical connections, manipulation of facts.
- Pseudoscience and conspiracy theories — denial of scientific/objective data.
- Framing and one-sided presentation — highlighting an event or topic from a specific angle, which may lead to different interpretations or evaluations of what happened.
- False attribution — attributing statements and declarations to speakers and organizations that they didn’t make, with the aim of increasing the statement’s authority.
- Repetition of false theses — a canonical propaganda technique where an idea, especially a simple slogan repeated enough times, may be perceived as truth.