Most social media influencers share information without verifying facts, UNESCO

UNITED NATIONS : Social media influencers need urgent help to check their facts before they broadcast to their followers, in order to reduce the spread of misinformation online, UNESCO has warned.
According to a report by the UN’s Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, two-thirds of content creators fail to check the accuracy of their material, making them and their followers vulnerable to misinformation.
The findings come at a critical moment when social media influencers have become primary sources of news and cultural information for global audiences, yet 62 percent lack basic fact-checking practices.
“Digital content creators have acquired an important place in the information ecosystem, engaging millions of people with cultural, social or political news. But many are struggling in the face of disinformation and online hate speech and calling for more training,” UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay, said in a statement on Wednesday.
The UNESCO ‘Behind the screens’ survey, conducted with expertise from Bowling Green State University in the USA, examined 500 influencers across 45 countries, exposing critical gaps in content verification practices. The study found that 63 per cent of influencers lack rigorous fact-checking protocols, despite their significant impact on public discourse.
The survey uncovered trends in how creators assess information credibility including 42 per cent who use social media metrics like ‘likes and shares’ as primary credibility markers, while 21 per cent of respondents share content based solely on ‘trust in friends’ who shared it. Traditional news media, despite its expertise, ranks low as a resource, with only 36.9 per cent of creators utilising mainstream journalism for verification.
The digital rights landscape presented another challenge. Nearly 60 per cent of creators operate without understanding basic regulatory frameworks and international standards, leaving them vulnerable to legal risks and online harassment. While one-third report experiencing hate speech, only 20.4 per cent know how to properly report these incidents to platforms.
Responding to these challenges, UNESCO and the Knight Centre for Journalism in the Americas (USA) partnered to develop the first ever-global training course for digital content creators, it was pointed out.

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