Introduction to Disinformation Copy

Illustration by Storyset

Key Notions

Not all false information can be classified as disinformation. So, it is important to understand the difference between dis-, mis-, and malinformation.

  • Disinformation is intended to do harm, it is designed to manipulate. These stories are often entirely made up or use deliberately manipulated content.
  • Misinformation is unintentional. It can be a mistake by a journalist, or someone who shares gossip. It can still be harmful, but there is no intent to do harm.
  • Malinformation is intended to do harm, but uses factual information. This can be done by exposing someone’s private information or pictures, or by using content out of context.

Definition Quiz

The 7 common forms of information disorder

There are seven distinct types of problematic content that sit within our information ecosystem. They sit on a scale that loosely measures the intent to deceive.

Source: Adapted from First Draft News

The 8 Ps

Journalists, or individuals, may have different motivations for engaging in the common forms of information disorder that we just discussed. This table shows 8 different types of motivations, the 8 ‘P’s: Poor Journalism, Parody, to Provoke or ‘Punk’, Passion, Partisanship, Profit, Political Influence or Power, and Propaganda. These can be mapped against the forms in order to to see distinct patterns in terms of the types of content created for specific purposes.

Satire or parody
Misleading content
Imposter content
Fabricated content
False connection
False context
Manipulated content
Poor journalism
X
X
X
To parody
X
X
X
To provoke or to “punk”
X
X
X
Passion
X
Partisanship
X
X
Profit
X
X
X
Political influence
X
X
X
X
Propaganda
X
X
X
X
X
Source (adapted): https://firstdraftnews.org/fake-news-complicated/