Student: I get most of my news on social media.
Student: Instagram
Student: Just watch it on TV.
Student: Facebook.
Student: Snapchat. Even Tiktok if you get someone rambling on about something for a minute.
Vick Hope: News. It is everywhere.
Student: Celebrity news. Political news.
Student: Sport news.
Student: Boring news.
Student: But then it鈥檚 also just anything that happens.
Student: Falling over in a funny way.
Student: A lot of fake news.
Student: Fake news, there鈥檚 a lot of that.
Student: You can鈥檛 avoid it.
Vick Hope: It鈥檚 switched on twenty four hours a day and with the mega fast rise of social media, it is constantly pumped into your feeds.
Donald Trump: It鈥檚 fake news. It鈥檚 fake. I鈥檓 telling ya, it鈥檚 just fake news.
Vick Hope: We鈥檝e all heard the phrase 鈥渇ake news鈥, but what does it actually mean and does it matter? Latest research shows that only two percent of young people can spot it and over 60 percent say that fake news stories make them trust all news less. If we don鈥檛 trust the news, how will we know what鈥檚 really going on?
Student: I鈥檇 say that fake news has definitely left me confused.
Student: It鈥檚 kind of like Chinese whispers, you know what I mean?
Student: Anyone can make anything and they can be totally anonymous for what they鈥檝e created and what they鈥檝e put out into the world.
Student: You can鈥檛 even have a proper opinion on something because you don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 real or fake.
Student: It can ruin people鈥檚 lives.
Student: It does confuse me quite a lot. When you share it then you鈥檙e spreading that as well.
Vick Hope: It doesn鈥檛 have to be like that. With a little bit of knowledge, you can be the generation that got smart about fake news. We鈥檒l show you the different types and who鈥檚 behind it. Most of the fakes created are deliberate, now this is known as disinformation, some though are mistakes and this is called misinformation.
James Ball: Journalists get a load of training in how to find out what鈥檚 true and they have lots of checks and editors to try and make sure when they tell you something they鈥檝e got good reason to believe it. And crucially, if a journalist does make a mistake, they say sorry and they fix it because they have to.
Vick Hope: Light hearted stories that make humour from real news and situations can sometimes be mistakenly shared as real.
Alastair Reed: Satirical website The Onion wrote an article about Kim Jong-un, the North Korean dictator, which said that he was the sexiest man in the world 鈥 and this is a joke website in the US. People in China and in North Korea didn鈥檛 realise that is was a joke and shared it, believing it was true.
Vick Hope: One of the most wide spread types of fake news is clickbait.
James Ball: We鈥檝e all seen that sort of headline that looks great, 鈥淗ey you鈥檙e the millionth person to this site, claim your free iPad鈥. It鈥檚 never true and that鈥檚 a kind of fake information that can leave you really disappointed.
James Ball: There鈥檚 a trick on the internet where you鈥檒l also see a really intriguing news story. 鈥淭he Pope endorses Donald Trump鈥. And it鈥檚 something that makes you go, whoa, what鈥檚 that about and click. They鈥檙e giving you a story that looks sensational so that millions of people click it. And then they run loads of adverts next to them and so for each click they might get half a penny or even less than that but if you can get tens of thousands of people to click your really exciting looking headlines then you鈥檙e going to make a lot of money from them.
Vick Hope: But not all clickbait is fake news and money isn鈥檛 the only motivation for people who create it. The oldest type of fake news is propaganda. Now it鈥檚 been around for years but because of the internet, so many more of us see it these days.
Alastair Reed: Previously politicians and powerful people used propaganda to push their ideas and their politics onto the wider population and that might be through leaflets or a TV broadcast. The thing is what social media has done is to allow anybody to use those same tools and those same tactics to push their ideas onto others. It can affect the future of a whole country, if lots of people are making decisions and voting based off things that aren鈥檛 true.
Vick Hope: We all need to think about fake news and its consequences. How would you feel if someone made up a rumour about you? Think how bad you鈥檇 feel if someone important lied to you and you only found out later that it wasn鈥檛 true. Why not pause before you share and think if what you鈥檙e sharing is fact or fake.