Thursday, 30 March 2017

Class chat

Class discussion with Maddi Skeggs and Ashleigh Dawson


Games:
Woman’s gossip magazines
Two truths and a lie game


Making aware 

Fake news can happen from various forms - over time through rumours, or purposely planned
Photoshop = visual fake news

Self-created fake news - Instagram & social media
Affects of fake news other than changing opinions.
What is “fake news” defined as?

A social media app where you can only show the here and now?

So What?
Transparency and trust. Affects decisions.
News is like a bank. Strong and we can trust. But what happens when we can’t?
Paper Copy - Exposure project by Neve ___

Vehicle - web or paper? app? book to posters like example?
How to use social media to portray the truth
I wonder if our generation is losing engagement in serious news?
So much choice of what to hear, how can we know about news that doesn’t affect us?
More and more trashy news

7 Days tv show


What - the thing
How - method
Why - ‘so what?’
Statement, proposal etc
Communication, action
Vehicle


At some point, turn question into statement.

Tuesday, 28 March 2017

Advising with Tanya

Homeland - Sockpuppets - people feeding fake news

Viral information
Skewing people to see your side of an idea that hasn’t been quality assured

Watch The Snowden Files

Photo of a train in India and stuck the people on a European train and said “refugees in Europe”

Doesn’t have to solve a problem, can be an exploration and demystification.
Guide to fake news. Educate people into what they’re looking at. Older generations and socioeconomic groups?
Feeds a need that people that people have. Fake news wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t needed.


Might start accurate but evolve into something wrong. Send out a Chinese whisper.


Links to explore:


Monday, 27 March 2017

Advising with Gray

I arranged a meeting with Gray about the idea of Fun and Playfulness in relation to this topic.


Parody

What is fake news? Define? When did it arise?
Misinformation around politics and celebrities, hackers in Russia, spread on social media
Having fun, not always deliberate. Gets advertising money. Greed. Supported by Russian Hackers
Deliberate misleading news, generally political.

Do I want to look at it how it is defined, or do I want my own angle?
Why am I interested in this? Find a focus. Need to be able to find why you’re interested in this.
Keep asking why. Why why why? There needs to be a reason. The problem might be layered under heaps of things. What is the core?

If they keep saying it, people will eventually believe it. If something is said enough, does it become real?

Dada play: Bingo 
about poor guy who keeps getting called Bingo until he finally believes it.
Plus animated movie

Chinese Whispers

Social mindsets - why do I have to do anything?
Changing ideas for good. Deliberate deception for good. Is it ethical?
In a war comforting children

The White Lie Massey project
We have to lie sometimes

When a lie is used absolutely for good and peace of mind. Start collecting lies. Coin a new term!
Google White Lies

Look up social practical jokes

Germans do practical jokes for good
Press a button and everything goes crazy. Tricking people.
Set up scenario that is so entertaining that people go with it. Sneak in false information.

Are you more easily mislead alone or with people?

When does the framework affect our decision-making? When does pack mentality kick in? When do we stop thinking for ourselves?

What is the main key point that you’re interested in?

More important to know what to read. Why am I reading this stuff?
The phenomenon of belief. About us as people, even though I saw it in a political context. Socialness and us.


The correlation between play/false information/news. Who is playing? Puppetmaster? Politics are play.


As for all of these resources and sources that I have found, decide first my focus, then cull the ones from the list that don't fit it. I can't read through all of those readings that I have!!!