Section 8:
Applying the recommendations in this guide -
what does it really look like
on the ground?
Updated February 16, 2020
This page is part of a 11-part guide on preventing folklore, rumors
(or rumours), urban myths and organized misinformation campaigns from
interfering with development & aid/relief efforts, and government
initiatives regarding public health, the environment, etc.
It is not
a stand-alone page. It should be read as part of the entire guide.
This is the link to the introduction and
index for the other pages in this guide.
What does all this look like in practice?
The previous sections provide a great deal of information about how to
prevent and address misinformation from interfering with aid, relief and
development efforts, including public health initiatives. This section of
the guide provides examples of what applying these suggestions really
looks like on-the-ground.
In India, in the southern state of Telangana, videos were circulated
among villagers that had been staged or edited in a particular way and
claimed to show children being abducted by a criminal gang were circulated
in more than 400 villages in the southern Indian state of Telangana via
WhatsApp and an Indian messaging service called ShareChat. These videos
claimed that the children were being abducted in order to harvest their
organs. The claims in these videos were completely false. But
because so many people believed what they saw in these videos, people
stopped going out of night, several completely innocent people were
attacked by mobs who accused them of being organ thieves, and at least 25
people were murdered - lynched - falsely accused of being a part of the
gang.
In the southern Indian state of Telangana, barely half of the people
can read or write. But every home has at least one smartphone, usually a
second-hand Chinese one. Cheap data means that people with little access
to education have the fullest access to technology. Media literacy is low.
Villagers are glued to material circulating on WhatsApp and ShareChat for
news, viral videos and social conversations. Every village has more than
two dozen WhatsApp groups, carved along community, caste, kinship and
social interest lines. They are among 200 million Indians who send more
than 13 billion messages every day, making India the biggest market for
WhatsApp.
A local chief of police, Ms. Rema Rajeshwari, took action. A constable
was assigned to each village, going door-to-door showing people the fake
videos and messages, explaining that they were fake and asking people not
to share them nor believe them. Night patrolling was intensified. The
phone numbers of the village constable and the police chief were
distributed to villagers, and inscribed on walls. Village policemen worked
continuously with elders and council leaders to raise awareness. The
constables joined village Whatsapp groups to keep watch. The village
drummer - a modern-day town crier who performs at weddings, funerals and
makes public pronouncements - was mobilised to go around and counter
misinformation. Policemen formed cultural groups and travelled to
villages, singing songs and performing skits that they had composed about
the dangers of fake news.
Here's
the BBC story that tells more (note the links at the bottom to more
stories).
In Harris County, Texas, as of February 2020, there were NO cases of
the coronavirus -- officially Novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV),[28][29] and
unofficially as Wuhan coronavirus -- yet local Asian businesses there
experienced severe drops in customers, and public health officials there
are so worried about potential harm to people they created
a
web site specifically to address local fears and myths. Dr. Rose
Marie Leslie, a resident at the University of Minnesota, has also taken to
TikTok, where she has more than 473,000 followers, to debunk myths. The
World Health Organization (WHO) also has responded with
a
myth-busting page.
Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) in the USA has launched an ongoing
initiative,
Can
You Believe It?, to regularly look at the channels in which
disinformation reaches consumers, particularly through social media and
particularly regarding elections, and offer methods to combat its spread.
They are also encouraging listeners and their web site readers to tell
them what they are seeing and hearing regarding news stories and campaign
information running up to the 2020 election.
In March 2020, a report said that that
50%
of what Ghanaians know about the coronavirus is misinformation. Amid
the COVID-19 outbreak and the proliferation of misinformation,
a
network of online volunteers emerged in Ghana to translate health
messages into local languages so residents can access accurate
information. Elisabeth Efua lead efforts, collaborating with
Farmerline, a company based in Ghana that uses technology to support
farmers and was also looking to translate health messages. Elisabeth, an
artist and performer, used information from the World Health Organization
(WHO) to write scripts about hand washing, COVID-19 symptoms, and common
terms associated with the virus such as social distancing and flattening
the curve. She put out a call on social media and dozens of people
responded, wanting to help translate. Within 48 hours, she’d received
translations in 15 languages including Twi, Ga, Ewe, and Hausa. The health
messages are recorded as voice notes on WhatsApp, which volunteers have
been disseminating and asking recipients to forward to others who speak
the language, akin to chain mail.
In June 2017, an image was posted to a very popular Facebook group that
targeted an Oregon small town in particular. The image claimed to be by a
woman who had been to a local grocery store in the town and who, while in
the parking lot, was accosted by strangers who wanted to buy her baby. But
in this case, the online community immediately rallied to debunk the
rumor. I posted this
case study because I
was a part of the online community where this attempt at a misinformation
campaign was started, and because I believe it offers a good example of
the kind of trust-building before such a situation occurs, and the kind of
quick response, that's needed to handle these social media rumors.
The role corporations and businesses can play in
fighting misinformation cannot be over-stated. In this article from in
the Journal of Business and Technical Communication, "Frozen
Meat Against COVID-19 Misinformation: An Analysis of Steak-Umm and
Positive Expectancy Violations," the paper's authors note,
"Instead of finding new ways to promote its products, the company
shifted its focus to the public’s urgent needs, breaking down possible
approaches to navigating information flow during the pandemic. This
resulted in overwhelming praise on social and news media, including
almost 60,000 new Twitter followers within a week. Drawing on expectancy
violation theory, this case study examines Steak-umm’s strategy, the
content of social media responses, and why the approach was successful."
And, as noted earlier, great example of many of these principles being
put into practice is in Nigeria, where religious leaders are using the
teachings of Islam and local community volunteers are being leveraged in
Nigeria to educate communities regarding the value of educating girls,
breastfeeding, routine immunization (vaccines) and other public health and
development issues - this is chronicled in
Innovation
in Action: Fighting Polio in Nigeria from the UN Foundation. Here's
a similar story about this model from UNICEF in Nigeria, in
this
BBC story.
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