My personal request: if you see a headline that makes you feel a strong emotion, you should think about whether it’s actual for at least 20 seconds before boosting or typing out your opinion
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My personal request: if you see a headline that makes you feel a strong emotion, you should think about whether it’s actual for at least 20 seconds before boosting or typing out your opinion
Yes I’m subposting several things right now. It turns out plenty of people have retained alarmist Twitter user behaviour over here too
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My personal request: if you see a headline that makes you feel a strong emotion, you should think about whether it’s actual for at least 20 seconds before boosting or typing out your opinion
@misty the cookies bustle saga was a lie????
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@misty the cookies bustle saga was a lie????
@adr Cookie is real! Cookie is truth! Cookie is everything!!
(Don’t worry Cookie really is free)
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My personal request: if you see a headline that makes you feel a strong emotion, you should think about whether it’s actual for at least 20 seconds before boosting or typing out your opinion
@misty was just discussing this with some friends recently. having a strong emotional reaction to news/posts/messages is actually a fairly good indication that something is fake/clickbait/scam/etc.
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Yes I’m subposting several things right now. It turns out plenty of people have retained alarmist Twitter user behaviour over here too
@misty now I'm wondering if it was me (as a general thing, I do worry about sharing untrue stuff)
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Yes I’m subposting several things right now. It turns out plenty of people have retained alarmist Twitter user behaviour over here too
@misty i see a lottt of misinformation passing through these parts, and i often wonder how the dynamic of the fediverse ~feeling~ small and trustworthy contributes to that…
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@misty now I'm wondering if it was me (as a general thing, I do worry about sharing untrue stuff)
@giflian Not you specifically! Don't remember you specifically sharing anything like that tbh
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@misty i see a lottt of misinformation passing through these parts, and i often wonder how the dynamic of the fediverse ~feeling~ small and trustworthy contributes to that…
@brhfl Yeah, I do feel like there's also the angle where people feel self-congratulatory about being in a different environment than twitter that makes people paradoxically less likely to *actually* take care about spreading misinfo, since you’ve already put in the effort by being here?
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Yes I’m subposting several things right now. It turns out plenty of people have retained alarmist Twitter user behaviour over here too
@misty ironically this is something that often makes me wonder if I’m just not well adapted to modern social media, because these days if I get a strong emotional reaction to anything I’d much rather withdraw into quiet contemplation instead of post about it
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My personal request: if you see a headline that makes you feel a strong emotion, you should think about whether it’s actual for at least 20 seconds before boosting or typing out your opinion
I'd go one step further and say "even if it's a meme."
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@misty ironically this is something that often makes me wonder if I’m just not well adapted to modern social media, because these days if I get a strong emotional reaction to anything I’d much rather withdraw into quiet contemplation instead of post about it
@arjache I think your instinct is the right one, even if it's going against the grain!
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@misty was just discussing this with some friends recently. having a strong emotional reaction to news/posts/messages is actually a fairly good indication that something is fake/clickbait/scam/etc.
@d6 Yeah... I think you're completely right.
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My personal request: if you see a headline that makes you feel a strong emotion, you should think about whether it’s actual for at least 20 seconds before boosting or typing out your opinion
@misty Sorry we're just all pretty excited about Cookie
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My personal request: if you see a headline that makes you feel a strong emotion, you should think about whether it’s actual for at least 20 seconds before boosting or typing out your opinion
@misty have to remind myself of this periodically. same goes for when I read things in general that seem plausible and reinforce my preexisting beliefs. it's really hard not to fall into the trap of it, especially content recommendation algorithms working so hard to cater to our preconceived notions
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@giflian Not you specifically! Don't remember you specifically sharing anything like that tbh
@misty I have flubbed a few times, not realizing an article was on a fake news site. I’m better at spotting that now, but it took some mistakes to get there.
For a while I was sharing YouTube movie trailers with friends before realizing most of them were fan-made or scams for clicks (and this was even before consumer genAI tools). I had to block so many YouTube channels…
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R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic