Adolescents’ Vulnerability to Fake News and to Racial Hoaxes: A Qualitative Analysis on Italian Sample
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Fake News in Adolescence
3. The Peculiarity of the False News on Immigrants: The ‘Racial Hoaxes’
4. Materials and Methods
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- The data collection phase
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- The data analysis phase
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- social media and their use, which social media are most used, the time they spend on social media and the content they seek most;
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- informative preferences, or if they inform themselves, if yes by what means;
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- fake news, that is, if they have ever come across or shared, the characteristics that according to them have fake news, the topics that deal with fake news, and the consequences that these may have;
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- racial hoaxes about immigrants, if they read about the subject and if they have ever come across fake news about immigrants.
5. Results
5.1. Social Media Uses
Example 1: ‘I used TikTok before, not so much, but I used it. Then, in relation to what happened to that girl in Palermo, my parents banned me, so now I’m not on any social media. Not that I used it for some reason, I used to watch black humor videos.’
5.2. Informational Needs
Example 2: ‘I’m of the opinion that anyway, the news arrives either one way or the other, maybe, watching the news at lunchtime, they arrive then. Then it’s up to us to choose what we like.’
Example 3: ‘Yes, I inquire, but only on topics that interest me.’
Example 4: ‘Not everything, I just like to know about things that interest me.’
Example 5: ‘Yes, I inquire through the Instagram fanpage.’
5.3. Fake News and Biased Information
Example 6: ‘I read them but I never believed them, I mean I realized they were fake. This is because I have computer skills, that is, I know when they make the graphics false, the images…’
Example 7: ‘I think literature has helped me in my linguistic knowledge.’
Example 8: ‘No, not at all.’
Example 9: ‘sincerely, I don’t think so, but I still know what fake news are.’
Example 10: ‘There was a fake profile on Instagram that asked me for friendship [on the social network]. At first, I fell for it because it told me things that made me think that it was a real person, for example, <<Who do you follow on Instagram? >>, then, however, he started to ask me photos and photos and photos...there I thought it was fake and I never replied.’
Example 11: ‘I don’t remember the news exactly. I remember the theme. One of the themes was gossip.’
Example 12: ‘The news? No, I don’t remember...now I just don’t get [in mind]. I just remember it was about gossip.’
Example 13: ‘Choosing of a tronista [a man being courted on the TV show] in Uomini e Donne [an italian Tv format].’
Example 14: ‘A love story between the characters of Riverdale.’
Example 15: ‘Cristiano Ronaldo has paid a large share of money for health services.’
Example 16: ‘It was said that a football player was dead, but he wasn’t really dead.’
Example 17: ‘I had believed it mainly because I like to think that such an important person did a good deed.’
Example 18: ‘I fell for the scoop because we, as girls, are pleased to see that the protagonists of a TV series who are in love in the plot, also have a relationship in life.’
Example 19: ‘I honestly at first I was a little bit believing it because, I say, it said words that a little bit made you believe, but then I thought, ‘I don’t think that so many people are killed by the vaccine.’’
Example 20: ‘sometimes already in the title they use exaggerations, they magnify things.’
Example 21: ‘the images are more important than the titles, they are also found on social media and are in the foreground and larger than the titles. For example, a photomontage that looks real.’
Example 22: ‘there are not too many details.’
Example 23: ‘when there’s too much detail. If you have to make a fake, there are two things you have to do: first, invent a story and then invent it around a painting that you mentally do and second, add the details.’
Example 24: ‘that you talk about it even more and the risk is that everyone thinks it’s true.’
Example 25: ‘I never fell for it and I never shared, but I think of my parents or friends who always fall for it.’
Example 26: ‘you can lose credibility, I do not share.’
Example 27: ‘the risk is personal, you lose all credibility. Then if they point to you as the one who believes in everything, they isolate you, both on the same social media, but also when you go out with friends.’
Example 28: ‘and as they have already said a general alarmism, I do not think there is any other factor that can contribute.’
Example 29: ‘Maybe spread that news much more, that we take for real and spread it as much as possible, maybe that person sends it to another person and a chain is formed. These individual risks then have an effect on social risks, which lead to a greater virality of fake news.’
Example 30: ‘I don’t think I don’t take it all for real so even the slightest news I try to understand if it is real or not maybe comparing with other news and so on.’
Example 31: ‘No, not at all.’
Example 32: ‘sincerely, I don’t think so, but I still know what I am.’
Example 33: ‘I’m always on the title, but also on photos, like if you put it on the front page of the cover, put the title in bold, in black, in large, in double block letters, unlike the writing of the article text and then a photo of the news, a photo that can be fake, manipulated.’
5.4. Racial Hoaxes
Example 34: ‘We speak badly on the social networks of immigrants, with bad words, insults.’
Example 35: ‘In my opinion, it is not properly discussed because if you highlight the real difficulties that face these people, maybe this news would really move someone and make a decision to help them instead.’
Example 36: ‘This can be tricky because, in the end, you don’t know how many victims there really were.’
Example 37: ‘It tends to emphasize Moroccan did something, a Muslim found more to denigrate the fact that certain crimes, that is, a totally wrong thing or emphasized.’
Example 38: ‘Yes, they tell a story that is not true, but that serves the government. It is bad news because they are human beings.’
Example 39: ‘on TikTok, they talk about immigrants who are dirty and bring diseases. They have done nothing wrong to us and we make fun of them. But they’re mostly comments. False news about immigrants...mmmh, no.’
Example 40: ‘I think so that in my opinion is just one thing to make money... and just though the journalist writes Tunisian makes 100 thousand extra sales.’
Example 41: ‘about immigrants I don’t find much news but I often think that Salvini especially in his Instagram posts, also has a TikTok profile I think, always brings a lot of misinformation about immigrants trying to paint them a bad way and then label them so that other people follow his thinking.’
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Papapicco, C.; Lamanna, I.; D’Errico, F. Adolescents’ Vulnerability to Fake News and to Racial Hoaxes: A Qualitative Analysis on Italian Sample. Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2022, 6, 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6030020
Papapicco C, Lamanna I, D’Errico F. Adolescents’ Vulnerability to Fake News and to Racial Hoaxes: A Qualitative Analysis on Italian Sample. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction. 2022; 6(3):20. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6030020
Chicago/Turabian StylePapapicco, Concetta, Isabella Lamanna, and Francesca D’Errico. 2022. "Adolescents’ Vulnerability to Fake News and to Racial Hoaxes: A Qualitative Analysis on Italian Sample" Multimodal Technologies and Interaction 6, no. 3: 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6030020
APA StylePapapicco, C., Lamanna, I., & D’Errico, F. (2022). Adolescents’ Vulnerability to Fake News and to Racial Hoaxes: A Qualitative Analysis on Italian Sample. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction, 6(3), 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6030020