What's your responsibility when sharing information online?
You see something shocking and share it immediately. Later: it's false! Too late - 50 friends already shared it. Misinformation spreads FASTER than facts. Every share is an endorsement. You have power AND responsibility. Use it wisely!
• Misinformation: False, but not intentionally deceptive (mistakes, rumors)
• Disinformation: Deliberately false to deceive
• Malinformation: True info shared to cause harm
All three spread! Intent doesn't matter to consequences!
False info often spreads FASTER than truth because: (1) It's more EMOTIONAL (shocking, scary, outrageous), (2) People share BEFORE checking, (3) Corrections don't go viral, (4) Fits existing beliefs (confirmation bias), (5) We trust friends who share. YOU are the firewall!
When you share, YOU endorse it to your network! They trust YOU. Before sharing: (1) Verify it's true, (2) Check source, (3) Read BEYOND headline, (4) Ask "Why am I sharing - inform or outrage?", (5) Consider: Does this help or harm? You're a publisher now!
YOU can: (1) STOP the spread (don't share unverified!), (2) CORRECT misinformation politely when you see it, (3) MODEL good behavior (fact-check before sharing), (4) EDUCATE others about verification. Every person who pauses before sharing makes the information ecosystem healthier!
You have a responsibility to verify before sharing - each share amplifies information to your network who trusts you!
The problem:
• False info spreads 6x faster than truth
• Emotional content shared more than factual
• People share headlines without reading
• Corrections reach fewer people than original
• Trust networks amplify without verification
Before you share, ask:
1. Is it TRUE? Have I verified this?
2. Is it HELPFUL? Does it inform or just inflame?
3. Is it NECESSARY? Does my network need to see this?
4. Is it KIND? Could it unfairly harm someone?
Your sharing checklist:
✓ Read the FULL article (not just headline)
✓ Check the SOURCE (trustworthy?)
✓ Verify with fact-checkers
✓ Look for other credible sources confirming
✓ Check date (is this old news?)
✓ Consider your motivation (inform vs trigger emotion?)
If you shared something false:
1. Delete it
2. Post correction
3. No shame - happens to everyone!
4. Learn for next time
Remember: You're not just a consumer of information - you're a distributor. With that power comes responsibility!
Final thought: Congratulations on completing Critical Thinking! These 20 cards gave you tools to think clearly, evaluate arguments, spot manipulation, and be a responsible information citizen. Keep practicing!