416 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2019
    1. Google’s highlighted answers work terribly for queries that don’t have a definitive answer.

      I have found this to be the case in the past. Luckily, I have the education and research abilities to be able to validate the content that I am getting in the highlighted box, but I could see how most people would take that information they receive in the box as fact and not question it.

    2. I think that this is a very important distinction!

    1. "are jews evil."

      As someone who is jewish, reading that this is what pops up on autocomplete really is alarming to me. Search engines are making it seemingly easier to hold biased or hateful believes about specific minority groups that they might really know nothing about.

    2. made me type in the words black on white crime."

      I just think there must have to be some external influences besides just the use of Google that would prompt him to type in "black on white crime". That is a very specific term to be aware of and sounds like he was in search of hearing very particular information that supports what he already believed about white supremacy.

    1. You would think this is just common sense but I know of so many people that immediately read something and react

    1. “And,” the student continues, “the Mayo Clinic is the same way. They make money off of patients so they want to portray regular hospitals as working.”

      If this is the case then what sources can really be trusted if every source says certain things to make a profit?

    2. they don’t want to spend their trust anywhere, and they think many things are equally untrustworthy.

      I was taught to not trust easily and to ask questions so I do understand why people may believe that many things are equally untrustworthy.

    1. that is, articles or videos that look like news content, and which appear to have gone through a journalistic process, but which are actually made up.

      fact-checking is very important nowadays because anything can appear to be real. I've definitely come across a good amount of articles and videos that I think are real at first but eventually find out that they contain fake information.

  2. Apr 2019
    1. Fake news and false rumors reach more people, penetrate deeper into the social network, and spread much faster than accurate stories.

      Reading this made me think of the one main newspaper in my hometown and the troubles they had from an emergence and popularity of new online stories. Many complained that the stories on the online newspaper site weren't being produced as fast as other online stories. What they didn't realize at the time is that they were given false information, and the worst part is that many do not follow up on stories to check credibility and accuracy. Figuring out the truth and the real stories takes time and our culture needs to learn how to slow down and value the effort required in producing true news stories.

    2. They call for a new drive of interdisciplinary research “to reduce the spread of fake news and to address the underlying pathologies it has revealed.”

      I think this is a great goal to have, and definitely necessary. It is so hard to know if you are reading the full truth, so how are we as a society going to be able to be well informed without something like this in place?

    3. that the truth simply cannot compete with hoax and rumor.

      I find it disheartening that we have reached a period in time, at which, the truth is no longer as popular or widely believed as a hoax or rumor. How are we ever suppose to really know the truth?

    4. In February 2016, a rumor developed that Trump’s elderly cousin had recently died and that he had opposed the magnate’s presidential bid in his obituary. “As a proud bearer of the Trump name, I implore you all, please don’t let that walking mucus bag become president,” the obituary reportedly said. But Snopes could not find evidence of the cousin, or his obituary, and rejected the story as false.

      I think this speaks to my prior comment about the importance of the narrative and the role this plays in spreading fake news. In my opinion, this type of controversial narrative is more likely to get attention in today's society.

    5. Fake news prospers, the authors write, “because humans, not robots, are more likely to spread it.”

      In a way this makes sense to me. I am more likely to read a story that is shared by one of my friends on Facebook or Twitter than I am to read a story from an email that was sent to me by the NY times as an ad because I perceive this as them pushing out their own content.

    6. Fake news and false rumors reach more people, penetrate deeper into the social network, and spread much faster than accurate stories.

      I am curious if this is because of the narrative/entertainment aspect of these types of stories or if it is another reason?

    7. And blame for this problem cannot be laid with our robotic brethren. From 2006 to 2016, Twitter bots amplified true stories as much as they amplified false ones, the study found. Fake news prospers, the authors write, “because humans, not robots, are more likely to spread it.”

      I think this is an unfortunate reality that has taken over our mindsets to share fake news. It is so easy to share fake news because we are not educated well enough on how to catch the red flags of fake news.

    8. In short, social media seems to systematically amplify falsehood at the expense of the truth, and no one—neither experts nor politicians nor tech companies—knows how to reverse that trend.

      Or one actually wants to reverse the trend?

    9. “The key takeaway is really that content that arouses strong emotions spreads further, faster, more deeply, and more broadly on Twitter,”

      This is definitely true. If you have a headline that can make someone cry, get excited, or is just relatable, in a sense it will spread a lot more quickly.

    10. Twitter users seem almost to prefer sharing falsehoods.

      I am a big time twitter user and this is very true. Sharing falsehoods the majority of the time produces more likes and retweets. Individuals on twitter want to be famous and get their name out there and if it means sharing a false story they are willing to do it along with arguing about it for more attention.

    11. “It seems to be pretty clear [from our study] that false information outperforms true information,” said Soroush Vosoughi, a data scientist at MIT who has studied fake news since 2013 and who led this study. “And that is not just because of bots. It might have something to do with human nature.”

      Fake news always has a better story because it is fake. We want the juicy stories and real media isn't always as interesting.

    12. By every common metric, falsehood consistently dominates the truth on Twitter, the study finds: Fake news and false rumors reach more people, penetrate deeper into the social network, and spread much faster than accurate stories.

      I think with all social media, especially twitter, we want everything to be fast. We want to be able to read a headline of two lines and know exactly what happened and as long as that headline grabs our attention we absent-mindedly share that information. Fake news travels faster because it's more interesting and grabs more attention. On twitter, the majority of individuals are on there for laughs and gossip. It takes 2 seconds to read a tweet or a headline and it takes an additional second to like or retweet it. Everyone just wants fast paced media and stories.

    13. the properties of its author (were they verified?), the kind of language it used (was it sophisticated?)

      Could information still be fake even if it is from a verified author who is sophisticated? Now a days, anyone can become verified on twitter.

    14. that is, articles or videos that look like news content, and which appear to have gone through a journalistic process, but which are actually made up.

      I have fallen into this so many times where a website can look reputable but have just blatantly false information on it

    15. First, fake news seems to be more “novel” than real news.

      this is what I was just thinking! It seems like you can make fake news as wild and more marvelous than the truth

    16. Fake news dominates according to both metrics. It consistently reaches a larger audience, and it tunnels much deeper into social networks than real news does

      This is very interesting because you would think people would want to use these new and sophisticated social media platforms in order to spread accurate news to people who might be using that platform as the only method of receiving any news update

    17. How does the computer know what truth is?

      I think this sort of relates back to the article that was posted about the self driving ubers- what can we trust technology to do for us and how well can it do it? Better than us?

    18. And while false stories outperform the truth on every subject—including business, terrorism and war, science and technology, and entertainment—fake news about politics regularly does best.

      this is very interesting to me considering that false information on politics probably can lead to some pretty severe consequences.

    19. : Fake news and false rumors reach more people, penetrate deeper into the social network, and spread much faster than accurate stories.

      I think this is very well stated considering that every person who has been on social media has probably seen or read some kind of tabloid that turned out not to be true

    20. First, fake news seems to be more “novel” than real news.

      True. There are standard headlines then there are fake news headlines which appease to our inclination to look for shocking news articles

    21. A false story reaches 1,500 people six times quicker, on average, than a true story does.

      It's probably because fake news hinges on being extreme in their "reporting" and so fake news can sometimes induce greater reactions

    22. It could reach 1,000 retweets, but it has a very different shape,” he said.

      So interesting. My friends and I talk all the time about how randomly things go viral. Posts on twitter made by normal people with less than a 1000 followers can sometimes reach thousands of people in a matter of days; this has always been a concept which has perplexed me!

    23. falsehoods were still 70 percent more likely to get retweeted than accurate news.

      I think this is what incentivizes people to put fake news above credible information. The drive for "retweets". "likes", "shares", and just general popularity creates this impulse wit users to do whatever necessary to stay relevant on his/her platform. This is of course a huge disservice to the general public who relies on a lot of social media sites for daily information.

    24. Twitter users seem almost to prefer sharing falsehoods.

      I am not an avid Twitter user, but I know that some users will circulate false information simply to draw attention to their account.

    25. “The key takeaway is really that content that arouses strong emotions spreads further, faster, more deeply, and more broadly on Twitter,”

      I think this can be said for all content in the media.

    26. How does the computer know what truth is?

      Think this is a really good question that they asked and as a result it clearly made the study more accurate. We should all ask these hard questions when doing research.

    27. “[Fake news] has become a white-hot political and, really, cultural topic,

      I see this being true in that fake news does not only impact politics, but also culture topics as well. With that being said, it is a problem that it is so widespread and dominant in basically all information.

    28. Fake news prospers, the authors write, “because humans, not robots, are more likely to spread it.”

      This is a sad reality that it is in our human nature to spread falsehoods. I think that this is a realization that many would not want to come to, but it is one that needs to be stated. In making this fact more known it could make society as a whole be more aware of what we share and spread.

    29. . “And that is not just because of bots. It might have something to do with human nature

      This is an interesting point. I think its very easy to believe something that falls in line with the beliefs you already hold. I think people will much more readily accept news that allows them to stay complicit with their bias.

    30. By every common metric, falsehood consistently dominates the truth on Twitter, the study finds: Fake news and false rumors reach more people, penetrate deeper into the social network, and spread much faster than accurate stories.

      Well stated. The truth often cannot prevail when information outlets are so saturated with fake news reports. Its disheartening to think that even trusted journalistic sources with a long history of credibility are falling under the umbrella of fake news. I think the best way to ensure accuracy in information attained is by diversifying your sources!

    31. short, social media seems to systematically amplify falsehood at the expense of the truth, and no one—neither experts nor politicians nor tech companies—knows how to reverse that trend.

      The amplification of falsehood seems to be a responsibility that falls on the consumer, but how the initial falsehood is propagated seems like the responsibility of news sites that fail to be objective in their journalism, no?

    32. Second, fake news evokes much more emotion than the average tweet. The researchers created a database of the words that Twitter users used to reply to the 126,000 contested tweets, then analyzed it with a state-of-the-art sentiment-analysis tool. F

      Matches my initial hypothesis!

    33. “It seems to be pretty clear [from our study] that false information outperforms true information,” said Soroush Vosoughi, a data scientist at MIT who has studied fake news since 2013 and who led this study. “And that is not just because of bots. It might have something to do with human nature.”

      I would imagine that part of this lies in the psychology of emotion. If something is almost real enough not to seem fake, it makes sense that it would trigger a subconscious emotional reaction, and desire to investigate the claim in a that continues to trigger this kind of reaction, than seek the truth.

    1. "b-l-a-c-k o-n w," th

      I just tried this in google to see what would come up and interestingly enough, none of the top results were the ones listed here. The first one was "black on white vans"

    2. "read the Wikipedia article"

      "read the Wikipedia article"...

    3. " 'Every bit of motivation came from things he saw on the internet. That's it. ... 'He is simply regurgitating, in whole paragraphs, slogans and facts — bits and pieces of facts that he downloaded from the internet directly into his brain.' "

      It irritates me so much that his defense team even considered this a sound argument. We as people get tons of information thrown at us daily, good and bad. Its up to us to filter it out, decipher the good from the bad, and ultimately use our own psyche and judgment to shape our character. Sure Dylan Roof may have been exposed to white supremacist propaganda online, but it was his decision to continue the searches, to let the searches inform his violent and disgusting decision to murder black church members and for that, he is fully accountable for his actions.

    4. Dylann Roof murdered nine people in a church basement in Charleston in 2015.

      This is still such a chilling sentence to read out loud.

    5. When Roof hit Enter for the search term "black on white crime," the search engine returned a list of websites. "The first website I came to was the Council of Conservative Citizens," Roof wrote.

      Google, in a way, does enable the spread of extremist propaganda, and enabling someone who is mentally vulnerable to read and see certain things may cause them to become obsessed and act irrationally.

    6. Bruck was referring to Roof's assertion in his confession and in a manifesto that a Google search shaped his beliefs.

      This is terrifying!! Its crazy to believe that Google could potentially be enabling the crazy and extremes to become even crazier and more extreme. Sometimes to much knowledge at your disposal is dangerous.

    7. Internet law expert Frank Pasquale is among those who have advocated for search result algorithms in the U.S. to be regulated by the government.

      I think this may be a good idea but also would there just be another way to spread hate speech. I feel like once it stops in one area individuals who still want to get their point across will find a way to do it.

    8. "People equate the position of search results with how true they are," Epstein explains. "What's higher is better. What's higher is truer."

      This is definitely not the way to think about searches because a lot of the times the top searches are sponsored.

    9. In the aftermath of the Trayvon Martin shooting, the ADL reported that multiple hate groups used inaccurate Internet posts about crimes against white people as a "propaganda tool" for white supremacy.

      Just like we learned last week, fake news travels very quickly on social media, so this makes a lot of sense.

    10. We do our best to prevent offensive terms, like porn and hate speech, from appearing, but we don't always get it right,

      I also think this would be a problem in society because some would call this censorship....

    11. " 'Every bit of motivation came from things he saw on the internet. That's it. ... 'He is simply regurgitating, in whole paragraphs, slogans and facts — bits and pieces of facts that he downloaded from the internet directly into his brain.' "

      I love how the attorney places the blame on the internet. Sure, he saw hate on the internet but it was his own actions that put him in that situation. The internet is just a platform where information is held.

    12. The newspaper pointed out that the search "j-e-w-s a-r-e" suggested, among others, the autocomplete phrase "are jews evil." (The same final word was suggested for the search "a-r-e w-o-m-e-n." The letters "a-r-e m-u-s-l-i-m-s" suggested the phrase "are muslims bad.")

      this is absolutely fascinating- i mean even if this isnt what you were going to search in the first place it has to have an effect on you at least subconsciously if not more

    13. 'Every bit of motivation came from things he saw on the internet.

      makes you want to really really think twice about some of the things that we are reading on the internet everyday....

    14. Internet law expert Frank Pasquale is among those who have advocated for search result algorithms in the U.S. to be regulated by the government.

      I'm curious about how they are currently regulated. If google is coming up with unique algorithms to filter search results, they are already regulated.

    15. "People equate the position of search results with how true they are," Epstein explains. "What's higher is better. What's higher is truer."

      I think this may be the case sometimes but I think it is also important to look at the rationale behind why people think the stuff listed higher up is true. In many cases, convenience is the answer. If I don't have time to look into something, I usually go with the answer at the top of the page not because I think it is more valuable than the answer or source at the bottom of the page but because I don't have time to read through all of the sources.

    16. "We do our best to prevent offensive terms, like porn and hate speech, from appearing, but we don't always get it right," the spokesperson continued and pointed to a June

      I think this point is getting at an interesting debate about what should be monitored and whether or not freedom of speech comes into play here.

    17. The newspaper pointed out that the search "j-e-w-s a-r-e" suggested, among others, the autocomplete phrase "are jews evil." (The same final word was suggested for the search "a-r-e w-o-m-e-n." The letters "a-r-e m-u-s-l-i-m-s" suggested the phrase "are muslims bad.")

      I think Google really needs to focus on amending its autocomplete results and base it not only on popularity of search, but also take into consideration the implications of the results so stereotypes won't be fed/implanted into peoples minds e.g. "are muslims bad."

    18. The Council of Conservative Citizens is a white supremacist organization

      This goes back to the tutorials by Mike Caulfield, who compared two sources, with one being a credible source and the other being an ill-funded conservative group. We can assume that Roof was consumed with information that came from a perspective that originates racial division, hence his radical ideologies.

    19. there is a disconnect between the stated mission of a free and open Internet and the reality of search algorithms, which come with all the messy biases of anything designed by humans.

      This is an example of a negative consequence of algorithms working in society.

    20. "People equate the position of search results with how true they are," Epstein explains. "What's higher is better. What's higher is truer."

      This relates to the previous article for this week about search engines trying to find the best answer and using the most popular. Here, it is people who are assuming that what is at the top is the best and the most correct. However, as we know from the previous article and what the author is saying here, this is not the case.

    21. "People equate the position of search results with how true they are,

      so true and I am guilty of that too, but there lies the problem!

    22. the Anti-Defamation League, which tracks hate groups. In the aftermath of the Trayvon Martin shooting, the ADL reported that multiple hate groups used inaccurate Internet posts about crimes against white people as a "propaganda tool" for white supremacy.

      You can't eliminate freedom of speech, however, there should be a way that google can mediate what comes up at the top of the search engine and eliminate violent propganda.

    23. Google said it "took action within hours" and changed its autocomplete results. The search engine company "did not comment on its decision to alter some but not all those raised in the article," the Guardian reported.

      So when the public notices the autocomplete results are hateful, Google decides to take action? Why is this not being filtered in the first place!

    24. "We do our best to prevent offensive terms, like porn and hate speech, from appearing, but we don't always get it right,

      I think this is why Google needs a team of human editors- to filter out all the hate speech and harsh language from appearing automatically.

    25. Roof told investigators he had read the Wikipedia article for Martin, and then, "for some reason after I read that, I," he paused before continuing, "I typed in — for some reason it made me type in the words black on white crime."

      It baffles me to think that his motives for the mass shooting were found through using Wikipedia and Google. I use both search engines almost every day, and it is disturbing to think individuals use these sources to plan horrendous crimes. But it makes me think how this can ever be stopped, considering the news is out there for the public and it will always been on the internet.

    26. That's it. ... 'He is simply regurgitating, in whole paragraphs, slogans and facts — bits and pieces of facts that he downloaded from the internet directly into his brain.' "

      Okay that's scary to think about...

    1. oracles for seekers to interrogate.

      Well put, honestly I feel like some people look for life advice on google.

    2. Google keeps it secret

      Google, RELEASE YOUR SECRETS! ;)

    3. its algorithm picks out whatever it thinks is the correct or best answer, and summarizes it prominently atop the results.

      Here's the issue with algorithms, they can categorizing information based on what is known and what can be grouped, but when someone types a "fake story" or otherwise false info into a search engine, the algorithms in place will make an attempt to group this info into a category that it doesn't belong to (hopefully I have a decent understanding of how algorithms work) and this is an issue because when someone receives an answer for a false search, it makes it easier for them to believe the false info.

    4. In reality, Google’s best editors are its user base, and the company might do well to explain more clearly why a certain snippet was chosen, and more enthusiastically solicit user feedback.

      This is an interesting statement since it was previously mentioned that google is pushing for more AI and less human editorial involvement. I understand that AI would make less mistakes, but it also would not be as subjective.

    5. Answers to queries about facts and figures, like historical names and dates, are accurate most of the time (but not always, about which, more below).

      I don't like the wording "most of the time". That is so dangerous because even if something is accurate 99.999% of the time, there is still that small percent of the time that it could be wrong, and all it takes to ruin your credibility is one wrong statement or fact.

    6. Over the weekend, the Outline published a lengthy report on the barely regulated Wild West that is Google’s “featured” snippets — the highlighted boxes that sometimes appear at the top of Google search results.

      I was unaware of how unregulated this feature is. I generally assumed it was factual and had been checked, which is really dangerous on my part.

    7. This is the crux of the problem: Google can only show you information if it exists on the web.

      If google can only show you information that exists on the web then we need to find a way for more information to be accessible, if that is possible.

    8. Oftentimes, “best answer” means “top result,” which itself translates to “what most users clicked on

      These are definitely two different things but somehow google and other search engines have found a way to correlate them.

    9. the Amazon Echo–like home-assistant chatbot speaker that’s supposed to answer any question automatically and accurately (key word: supposed to).

      I think this is a very important statement. We all just kind of assume that google has the correct answer because it's google. We just want information to be quick and correct and are gullible in that nature.

    10. It’s easy to tell when facts are accurate; it’s nearly impossible to know when advice is.

      google is really good at matching texts to the questions asked but think about how nice it would be if google could also not just give us texts with our key words in it but ones that were also reliable? that would be a great world and papers would be nice and easy to write

    11. For an increasing number of searches, Google’s program will attempt to highlight and excerpt the best answer to your query, without you even needing to click on a link.

      I have often found myself reading these little blurbs and taking them as gospel- it is sort of a shame how we have so information but many of us (me included sometimes) are too lazy to even click the link to figure out if we have it right

    12. This is the crux of the problem: Google can only show you information if it exists on the web. There are no news stories about Obama not planning a coup, just as web pages about the Holocaust tend to take as a given that it happened. Google can’t refer users to a web page that doesn’t exist, and it is — so far — not in the business of crafting rebuttals itself, which is why conspiracy theories dominate briefly, until they can be noticed and rebutted.

      I think this relates to some of the articles we read last week about how fake news gets more attention than real news. I think the bottom line here is that what is being talked about most is what gets circulated and this is a perfect example.

    13. The problem, naturally, is that Google’s highlighted answers work terribly for queries that don’t have a definitive answer.

      Now that I read this, it is all making sense! Sometimes I get great answers from google and sometimes they make no sense.

    14. but right now, its highlighted answers are just the dressed-up results of an advanced text-matching algorithm.

      This is a more accurate depiction of Google rather than this idea that it is a hub of accurate and complete information - I've noticed that many of my more ambiguous queries just match the body of text as closely as possible rather than answer the question.

    15. On the other hand, at its core, Google is an index — a searchable database of what is available on the internet.

      True. Not everything on Google is correct, as many fake sites exist. We need to be cautious of what we deem reliable information.

    16. its algorithm picks out whatever it thinks is the correct or best answer, and summarizes it prominently atop the results.

      It makes me wonder whether these algorithms hold a bias (political, social etc.) as oftentimes when we google we take the first answer and move on rather than scrolling for an alternative answer that we think is right.

    17. Oftentimes, “best answer” means “top result,”

      Best and most popular are not the same. Therefore, this means that picking the top result and using it as the best answer is not always going to be the same either.

    18. the Amazon Echo–like home-assistant chatbot speaker that’s supposed to answer any question automatically and accurately (key word: supposed to).

      This is important to emphasize, SUPPOSED TO. These search engines put out a lot of information and are supposed to be correct, but they are not always. The biggest problem with this is that most people believe everything Google puts out. Furthermore, as kids are becoming more reliant on these devices like the Amazon Alexa, they will only go to those search engines when they have a question and will take that answer as fact and never question it. Huge issue in my opinion.

    19. This is the crux of the problem: Google can only show you information if it exists on the web.

      This raises the question of who is to blame: Google for displaying the articles or the users for not fact checking the articles presented?

    20. The main thing to understand about these boxes is that they are chosen and filled out not by a dedicated editorial staff, but by Google’s search algorithm — a complex hive of weighting and ranking functions that determine where a link falls on the list.

      Google displays what it thinks is the answer we are looking for when we search a question based off an algorithm. Too often we take this answer at face value and move on!

    21. easiest solution would be for Google to hire a team of human editors to monitor and course-correct as needed, but that will almost definitely never happen.

      Seems like a pretty essential thing Google should have. A group that fact checks and edits out all the wrong information and fake news out there.

    22. The problem, naturally, is that Google’s highlighted answers work terribly for queries that don’t have a definitive answer.

      I know I personally think Google has all the answers, but half the time there are multiple answers to questions and I need to be more aware to read farther down the google search list then just stopped at the top after the blurb.

    23. For an increasing number of searches, Google’s program will attempt to highlight and excerpt the best answer to your query, without you even needing to click on a link.

      I have personally fallen trap to just reading these Google blurbs when I quickly searching things on google. I need to be more aware that these are not always the most reliable answers.

    1. Now I want to re-share this with people, but I’d like to be a good net citizen as well. Good net citizens:

      I think some people, like my mother lol, have genuine faith in many news articles and don't think twice about whether its necessary to vet the source. That's the scary part, some people aren't even trying to be a bad "net citizen", its just hard to believe (especially for older generations) that articles can be posted for the sheer purpose of profit or scam than to actually inform the public.

    2. Learn the skills and make the world a better place. There may be good excuses for not doing this, but time is not one of them.

      That is a good point. So often I use time as an excuse for not fact checking, but this article really takes away the option to do that.

    3. Now I want to re-share this with people, but I’d like to be a good net citizen as well. Good net citizens:

      I think this is such an excellent point to make. I never think about fact checking things I share before sharing them, but in a way, it is my duty to make sure the information is credible. Once i repost articles or information, I am essentially endorsing them, so if they are false, that is a negative reflection on me.

    4. Provide a context blurb t

      I think this step is crucial and something that I will try to do from now on when I post something online. I belief that if I explain the way that I accurately verified the source I am sharing, others will be more likely to either take the time to read the article, and/or have a more open mind when reading the material without having to be a cynical of the information being fake from the start.

    5. And you’re done. That may sound like a lot of steps, but each one is simple, fast, and fluid. Here are those steps executed in real time (video intentionally silent). I really encourage you to watch the video to see how ridiculously easy this is for someone with some training.

      I totally agree that this is easy, important, and something we should be doing to contribute positively to society. However, I think of majority of the time I am reading news which is on my phone when I am walking to class, or sitting on the train during summers, and I know myself well enough to say that unfortunately, I won't be looking up apa.org on my phone and fact checking. However, I do think it is something I should be doing. My question is how do we motivate people to do this?

    6. There’s really no excuse not to do this for things you share. It not only allows you to share from a more authoritative source, which is good for society and the economics of publishing, but it allows you provide your readers helpful context. Compare this:

      If we continue to share things without fact checking them we are just as much a part of the problem because we are helping in the spread of false information.

    7. Literally thirty seconds, if you know how to do it:

      I think as a society we are lazy and gullible. If something is written as an article, we just believe it because as a society we have started to lose skepticism and we believe everything that we see. We have to start believing things with a grain of salt. It takes a short amount of time to fact check articles but living in a fast paced society, we want everything at the snap of a finger and we just expect it to be true.

    8. You don’t need to write an essay. And most any student (or teacher!) can learn the techniques. Think of it as information hygiene, the metaphorical handwashing you engage in to prevent the spread of misinformation.

      I think this is great to make something that seems so large and unapproachable as fact checking is so few steps! for the people who like to share things on social media this is a really great way to make sure you aren't part of the propagation of fake news

    9. There’s really no excuse not to do this for things you share. It not only allows you to share from a more authoritative source, which is good for society and the economics of publishing, but it allows you provide your readers helpful context. Compare this:

      I completely agree! My dad had taught me this lesson when I stated something I read at face value, and explained that just because we are supposed to be able to trust information we read, we have to be sure we can stand behind that information if we are will to spread it, and fully believe in its source.

    10. Literally thirty seconds, if you know how to do it

      At the end of the day, I think we're all just too lazy to go through these formal checks. Social media is a dynamic platform, and we all want to share information while it's hot and trending; taking 30-90 seconds out the day to verify the information is a habit I don't think will catch on anytime soon.

    11. . It not only allows you to share from a more authoritative source, which is good for society and the economics of publishing, but it allows you provide your readers helpful context

      This shows another way that we as students, as well as researchers, can help create a better online environment. I am really glad that I know how to do this and I think if other students came to know this it would be greatly beneficial.

    12. There’s really no excuse not to do this for things you share.

      Very true...

    13. Now I want to re-share this with people, but I’d like to be a good net citizen as well. Good net citizens: Source-check what they share Share from the best source possible Provide source/claim context to people they share with when necessary

      I think this is interesting because a lot of people in our generation constantly share articles and content on Facebook without actually checking the accuracy of what is being reported. Half the time it is just fake news... Therefore we need to learn how to be good citizens and censor the articles we share

    1. But that story is from August 2015, clearly not evidence of Ford making any move due to the outcome of the election.

      Its so crazy how much extra work is now required to attain accurate information. We can have a discussion on access regarding this topic too because not everyone has the time to commit to researching the validity of a particular news article. It's hard enough to stay up to date with current events, there's an extra layer of obstacles at play when we have to allocate time and effort into making sure we're up to date on accurate information because of the prevalence of fake news.

    2. In 2008, we tried to get readers to rid their inboxes of this kind of garbage. We described a list of red flags — we called them Key Characteristics of Bogusness — that were clear tip-offs that a chain email wasn’t legitimate. Among them: an anonymous author; excessive exclamation points, capital letters and misspellings; entreaties that “This is NOT a hoax!”; and links to sourcing that does not support or completely contradicts the claims being made.

      I also like that a lot of email platforms filter out these messages in our spam folder. There's also a section on gmail called "important" that acts as a further filter system which I appreciate.

    3. Concern about the phenomenon led Facebook and Google to announce that they’ll crack down on fake news sites, restricting their ability to garner ad revenue. Perhaps that could dissipate the amount of malarkey online, though news consumers themselves are the best defense against the spread of misinformation.

      This is a good beginning step. I do think limiting the profit these fake news sites can make will help crack down on them but I agree with @ianikm15, the problem is when multiple people get their hands on these sites and begin to send it to the people they know. This is more of a consumer driven issue though cause I cant't imagine a way Google or Facebook can prevent the sharing of posts.

    4. Fake news is nothing new. But bogus stories can reach more people more quickly via social media than what good old-fashioned viral emails could accomplish in years past.

      This is so true. fake news is nothing new, the speed at which it gets across populations is the new phenomena.

    5. Donald Trump retweeted it, telling Fox News commentator Bill O’Reilly that it came “from sources that are very credible.”

      I feel like I hear this from Trump all the time, and I never know what he means when he says "very credible sources". I hate that people use this term and automatically assume it will justify whatever they are saying. I find something to be less credible when someone says it comes from a credible source, but then fails to name that source.

    6. “The fictions and fabrications that comprise fake news are but a subset of the larger bad news phenomenon,

      This quote intrigues me because I have never thought of fake news in this way. I just assumed all fake news was the same and bad, but it is interesting to hear it categorized and differentiated

    7. Comedian Amy Schumer may have contributed to the revival of this fake meme. She put it on Instagram, adding at the end of a lengthy message, “Yes this quote is fake but it doesn’t matter.”

      I feel like many people probably didn't read this all the way through (I know I am guilty of this at times like I mentioned earlier) which means that the fact that the quote is fake does not even register with people.

    8. We’ve long encouraged readers to be skeptical of viral claims, and make good use of the delete key when a chain email hits their inboxes.

      I think the nature in which we read news today (short stories, 24/7 news cycle, emails like the skimm) foster a culture which doesn't give us the time to be skeptical of fake news. I often find myself reading a few sentences of an article and then sending it along because I don't have time to read the whole thing and think it is interesting. This is problematic because I haven't had the time to check the quality and validity of the source I am sending.

    9. Concern about the phenomenon led Facebook and Google to announce that they’ll crack down on fake news sites, restricting their ability to garner ad revenue. Perhaps that could dissipate the amount of malarkey online, though news consumers themselves are the best defense against the spread of misinformation.

      While this is a good first step, it does not prevent people from sharing fake news to others that they are friends with when they share a post.

    10. Read beyond the headline.

      Very important note- to always read beyond the headline to ensure the information is correct and fact checked.

    11. Fake news is nothing new. But bogus stories can reach more people more quickly via social media than what good old-fashioned viral emails could accomplish in years past.

      Fake news and propaganda has been around for a while; however, it is now more prevalent with the tools available to widely share news faster.

    12. Check the date.

      I fall into this one all of the time- you think you have found a juicy new piece of news but it is actually from years ago

    13. Many times these bogus stories will cite official — or official-sounding — sources, but once you look into it, the source doesn’t back up the claim

      this one is interesting because I have really done all the other ones to ensure a source is credible but I do not frequently click on linked articles

    14. If a provocative headline drew your attention, read a little further before you decide to pass along the shocking information.

      I am one of the worst about click bait! Often the headlines catch you but then the story isnt what yo thought it would be or it takes so long to read because you have to click through ads that you never finish it.

    15. hat were clear tip-offs that a chain email wasn’t legitimate. Among them: an anonymous author; excessive exclamation points, capital letters and misspellings; entreaties that “This is NOT a hoax!”; and links to sourcing that does not support or completely contradicts the claims being made

      To me this seems fairly obvious but I guess that since we have come a lot further since 2008

    16. A lot of these viral claims aren’t “news” at all, but fiction, satire and efforts to fool readers into thinking they’re for real.

      I fall into this all the time- things that are not true get sent to into group messages from twitter and it is the only information you see at all on that specific event and are left confused about its validity

    17. But the link to a government benefits website doesn’t support the claim at all.

      This seems dangerous as I usually look if the source is credible without looking any further as to whether the information corroborates

    18. Another tell-tale sign of a fake story is often the byline.

      This is often a small detail that I tend to overlook since my primary objective is to read the content of the article

    19. Check your biases. We know this is difficult. Confirmation bias leads people to put more stock in information that confirms their beliefs and discount information that doesn’t.

      This is so true! The other day on Facebook, I saw a relative post about a satirical article on the Onion........ being outraged by a story about millennials that merely fed into that relatives confirmation bias, not realizing the Onion is not a genuine news site.

    20.  If a provocative headline drew your attention, read a little further before you decide to pass along the shocking information. Even in legitimate news stories, the headline doesn’t always tell the whole story. But fake news, particularly efforts to be satirical, can include several revealing signs in the text.

      It is scary how few people read beyond the headline. This is obvious in the comments section of the various news articles posted to Facebook, where people ask questions or state their opinions on something that, if they actually even clicked on the article, they would likely immediately retract.

    21. Comedian Amy Schumer may have contributed to the revival of this fake meme. She put it on Instagram, adding at the end of a lengthy message, “Yes this quote is fake but it doesn’t matter.”

      This is a whole other problem in itself. Having people know something is fake but still sharing it because they want to not only encourages fake news, but it also perpetuates it for those readers that do not do these fact checking things.

    22. Consider the source. In recent months, we’ve fact-checked fake news from abcnews.com.co (not the actual URL for ABC News), WTOE 5 News (whose “about” page says it’s “a fantasy news website”), and the Boston Tribune (whose “contact us” page lists only a gmail address).

      I find it so crazy that websites go to such lengths to make them appear real. Additionally, I have never really thought about doing any of these things when reading any type of news or article that is shared that I end up reading. Really fascinating insight.

    1. You have some trust, and you have to be willing to spend it somewhere.

      I do agree with this point. We must have certain sources and people that we completely trust, but again, I do not think it is a bad thing to be picky about who we decide to trust.

    2. So 34 other experts had considered this person’s niche work worth talking about but hey, we’re still not sure this guy’s worth listening to on a subject we know nothing about and in which he is making rather moderate claims…

      I understand the danger of being too skeptical about everything, but in some ways I think that may be better than the alternative. If you trust everything then you overexpose yourself. While it is necessary to recognize what you should and should not trust, I don't think its a bad thing to be hesitant and skeptical before fully buying into what the author is preaching.

    3. And students will economize that lesson in a heartbeat. I

      I agree with much of what the author has to say but I also believe that he is making some hasty generalizations about "students" as a whole. I agree that our generation has become a bit less trusting of certain sources, but from my experience, I do not necessarily feel that students have mostly decided not to trust anything at all. However, overall this was still a very interesting read.

    4. If everything is compromised, then everything can be ignored, and filtering is simply a matter of choosing what you want to hear.

      I think this is very well stated and also frightening. I think it perfectly exemplifies why fake news gets spread more easily than real news (the previous article we just read), the answer is that we have the opportunity to push content and choose what we want which means anything can be ignored!

    5. That upper register of “Nope, that quote was used correctly” is something you really have to coax the students into.

      I think this speaks to the way we have been taught in school to debate and question everything. Also, I think we have been taught about the importance of perspective a lot. While one person might think something is taken completely out of context because of their background or opinion, I may think it is in context because of my background and opinion.

    6. I did what I encourage students to do in such cases: as a sanity check, make sure that the person being quoted as an academic expert has a publication record in the relevant area, preferably with a cite or two.

      It is very important to do research on researchers to see if they have any connection to different businesses and if they are knowledgeable in their said field. For example, if we think about Dr. Phil most of us think that he is a medical doctor like a psychiatrist but he actually only has a PhD in clinical psychology. It is very important to research individuals because it could very easily be fake news.

    7. Well, says a student, they make their money selling supplements, and so they have an incentive to talk down traditional medicine.

      I learned a lot about this particularly in my health statistics class. Everything is a business and their job is to push their product in any capacity that they can. Some businesses even hire researchers that will highly rate their products in exchange for money. You have to question everything, researchers and products because with money and privilege businesses can bamboozle consumers.

    8. hey don’t want to spend their trust anywhere, and they think many things are equally untrustworthy.

      For me, in the sciences we have been taught to question everything. Curiosity and skepticism are key in creating new knowledge. So in my opinion, I think not trusting is a viable option.

    9. The record comes up. This guy’s top article on birds, biologists, and indigenous knowledge has something like 34 citations in Google Scholar. “So what do you think?” I ask them.

      I think we are taught that almost everyhting off the internet is going to in some way be incorrect- which is why despite the 34 citations people are still thinking it might be a no go

    10. “And,” the student continues, “the Mayo Clinic is the same way. They make money off of patients so they want to portray regular hospitals as working.”

      but this is sort of what we are trained to do in school- look at everything critically because someone probably has some reason for saying what they do. Which when put in this context i am able to see that it is a shame that we cannot come to trust any sources

    11. Well, says a student, they make their money selling supplements, and so they have an incentive to talk down traditional medicine.

      Profit seeking motives are a huge culprit for the spread of fake news. It's really hard to figure out who or what to trust as a consumer.

    12. Well, says a student, they make their money selling supplements, and so they have an incentive to talk down traditional medicine.

      Its funny that the author mentions being a "proud papa" when a student notices this. My dad had always taught to me to question who and where I am getting information from, by example. If he found an interesting statistic cited in the paper, he would go online to look into it further to see how credible the researchers were and the study they conducted, before accepting a statistic at face value.

    13. Breitbart is funded by the Mercers, who are using it directly to influence political debate, but the Washington Post is also owned by Jeff Bezos who donated to Democrats.

      I think what this article uncovers is that the level of credibility we attribute to a source can be contingent upon our personal beliefs, values, and preference which suggests that we can't necessarily produce or consume information that is universally accepted.

    14. So enough of the “this isn’t great either”, enough of the “eh”. What’s your best option for spending that trust? Why?

      I have never really thought about this and if I as a student do this myself. However, I think this article makes good points on how to evaluate your trust in sources and why it is beneficial. I also think the advice here to think about what our best option for spending that trust is and why is important as well as worthwhile.

    15. they don’t want to spend their trust anywhere, and they think many things are equally untrustworthy.

      After taking News Literacy and other journalism classes I have learned the multiple ways news organizations use propaganda and fake news to alter our perception of things. There is biases in almost everything we read and it is our duty as individuals to educate our selfs to catch the red flags and bias in reporting. Therefore, I do not give my trust out to multiple news sources but rather reference multiple news outlets and sources when reading about one event or topic in the news.

    1. To describe the “stranger,” words such as “home-invader,” “sex offender,” “trespasser,” or “intruder” without pants and growling in a child’s room, would have painted a more accurate picture. Furthermore, words like “hero,” “home-owner,” law abiding family man” or “good guy with a gun” would have better described this man protecting his daughter, in his own home.

      Such good points. Media literacy is such a complicated issue, with so many entities bearing so much responsibility. The media churn machine, in which stories are packaged and repackaged, spun and re-spun, shared and re-shared, is just so volatile. We expect headlines to be more objective, but something as small as a biased headline can have tremendous ripple effects.

    2. However, his pointers assume citizens are doing the bare minimum in reading the articles they cite.

      Oh gosh, reading beyond the headline. Yes, this is truly an advanced skill for many folks. :)

  3. kristinthoughts.home.blog kristinthoughts.home.blog
    1. I had not previously considered it, but in walking through the halls I feel there are more male professors that female.

      I think it depends on the department, but in general, there are more male faculty--at least at Wake. Here are the most recent numbers: https://prod.wp.cdn.aws.wfu.edu/sites/202/2018/10/2017_2018_p35.pdf

    1. I find it hard to believe that while many Americans and American institutions suggest it is economically sustainable, so many other countries can provide freely to its citizens something we have denoted a privilege, rather than a right. The crux of the problem seems to lie less with whether free access to the best information is economically feasible, but whether we can truly change stratified system which inherently chooses who is and is not worthy of including.

      Wow, this is such a valuable insight. Within our system, profit is a primary motivator, but the sustaining factor isn't profit, it's inequality. Thinking that says "I paid for it, so why should you get it for free?"

    1. The odds of coming to a conclusion favorable to the industry are 3.6 times greater in research sponsored by the industry than in research sponsored by government and nonprofit groups,

      Although some researchers may not be aware that they are skewing their results, I think that this is a reflection of the bias and desire to produce a drug that will make the company a lot of money. Success in this business seems to be reflected based on the amount of money that is made from the drug rather or more stronger than the benefits that patients could experience. This system is so flawed, but it is also so hard to find the right solution. The production of new drugs is so important, so how do we take out this factor of financial benefit?

    2. the New England Journal of Medicine regularly features articles over which pharmaceutical companies and their employees can exert significant influence.

      The fact that pharmaceutical companies are able to influence the use and production of new drugs with capitalist motives is concerning. Not only are the drug companies influencing research and production of research, but they are also influencing the use of the drugs by influencing the doctors. Doctors are often taken to nice dinners, etc. by pharmaceutical companies so that they can convince them to use their new drug. I think that drug companies have way too much influence due to capitalist means, which could put many in harm.

    3. independent researchers could analyze the data from trials and come to their own conclusions.

      this is where information access becomes a crucial part of this paper and relates to our classes discussion as a whole!

    4. One of the leading proposals would be to compel drug companies to release all of the data from trials of drugs that are on the market.

      hopefully this would make it so that people who are looking critically at drugs are able to see correlations between negative side effects that are frequently swept under the rug until it is too obvious that it is a problem.

    5. Company executives seeking to promote their drugs can design research that makes their products look better. They can select like-minded academics to perform the work.

      it is so incredibly concerning that one is able to put this much spin on something as important as drug research and development- it seems that there needs to be more in place in terms of monitoring and searching for these biases.

    6. who had previously accepted outside compensation from the sponsoring drug company in the form of consultant pay, grants or speaker fees.

      We discussed pharmaceutical companies in my bioethics class as well- I had no idea before that there was so much corruption within these big companies that everyone relies on to give them adequate care.

    7. The odds of coming to a conclusion favorable to the industry are 3.6 times greater in research sponsored by the industry than in research sponsored by government and nonprofit groups,

      This must be a solution to this problem! We simply cannot accept results that are skewed so greatly, especially when it comes to people's health and wellbeing. There is nothing more valuable and sacred than a person's health, and the fact that we are toying with results that can directly harm the public is so disheartening.

    8. “If you looked closely at the data that was out there, you could see warning signs,” said Steven E. Nissen, a Cleveland Clinic cardiologist who issued one of the earliest warnings about the drug. “But they were overlooked.”

      The fact that drugmakers and researchers are willing to put people's health a risk in exchange for a monetary gain is simply horrifying. Also, warning signs should never be overlooked especially with a risk as dangerous as a greater risk for heart attack.

    9. “If you have the privilege of selling a drug, in return should come the responsibility to share everything you know about the drug,”

      Yes, yes, and yes. Transparency is not too much to ask for when it comes to things going into our bodies.

    10. One of the leading proposals would be to compel drug companies to release all of the data from trials of drugs that are on the market.

      This is a good one. Its like asking politicians to release their tax returns. If they vehemently refuse you know something's up.

    11. “The drug companies went nuts about requiring registration,

      Surprise surprise.

    12. It’s too hard for anyone — editors, peer reviewers, readers — to tell whether that bias has affected the work.”

      This is an especially important point because it shows just how dangerous the lack of oversight on the pharmaceutical industry really is. Bias exists, we know this as readers, but of course the corruption is carried out under the table so no one actually knows which drugs are reliable and which are not. At least not until real life cases of dangerous side effects start to arise, by which point its essentially too late.

    13. Company executives seeking to promote their drugs can design research that makes their products look better. They can select like-minded academics to perform the work

      this is exactly what I was trying to get at with my earlier annotation where I pointed out how data can say anything you want it to say. This is of course harmful most to consumers, we need to be hyperaware of all the information that exists for anything that is marketed to us; especial regarding medicine since the cost can sometimes be one's life.

    14. Celebrex erupted amid charges that the companies had shaped their research to obscure the dangerous side effects.

      There needs to be more oversight (government or otherwise) for how pharma companies market their drugs to consumers.

    15. But since about the mid-1980s, research funding by pharmaceutical firms has exceeded what the National Institutes of Health spends

      On the surface this sounds like a great thing, who wouldn't want researches to get as much funding as possible in order to continue finding innovative ways to improve medical care. However, with the amount of corruption and fraud that characterizes this industry, I am very weary that research funding by pharma companies has exceeded what the National Institute of Health spends.

    16. who had previously accepted outside compensation from the sponsoring drug company in the form of consultant pay, grants or speaker fees.

      I think this should be illegal. In journalism you're not allowed to pay the people you interview, this is done so that the information presented can be devoid of as much bias as possible and this should be the case for the researchers publishing on these drugs.

    17. A Food and Drug Administration scientist later estimated that the drug had been associated with 83,000 heart attacks and deat

      This is so ridiculous! The entire pharmaceutical industry has become this huge enterprise centered around maximizing profits rather than producing drugs that can help people. The price of insulin in the United States is many times more expensive than any other developed nation in the world. People are dying because they're having to ration their insulin intake simply because they cannot afford the proper dosage.

    18. The drug raised the risk of heart attacks.

      In my Econometrics class, we talked a lot about how data can say virtually anything you want it to say. My professor would implore us to be especially vigilant with where we gather information and to make sure to diversity our sources, but honestly, when reputable scientists and publications can publish bogus research like this its really disheartening.

    19. This is not about doing gotcha with industry. It’s about how to restore trust.”

      We definitely need to work to restore trust in the pharmaceutical industry but the only way, would be to limit the privileges of big companies and there doesn't seem like a valid way to do that at this moment.

    20. research can be biased and that it can be difficult for medical journals to unmask the problems.

      This is a very true statement. Research and statistics can be manipulated in many ways to get desired outcomes. There needs to be some sort of system in place to hold individuals who are manipulating science accountable. If we think about the anti vaccination example, a researcher manipulated data to make that claim and individuals are still holding on to that idea today, even though it has been proven false. Researchers have a lot of power and privilege and they affect society in a lot of ways and they need to be held accountable.

    21. Company executives seeking to promote their drugs can design research that makes their products look better. They can select like-minded academics to perform the work. And they can run the statistics in ways that make their own drugs look better than they are.

      This is something that we discussed in my Health Statistics course. If we are basing the validity of experiments off of statistics, there's no way to tell if the statistics were manipulated for favorable outcomes. Also, correlation does not mean causation.

    22. A Food and Drug Administration scientist later estimated that the drug had been associated with 83,000 heart attacks and deaths.

      Money is becoming way more important than the safety of individuals. How can researchers report favorably for a drug that can potentially kill individuals just for money?

    23. The trial had been funded by GlaxoSmithKline, and each of the 11 authors had received money from the company. Four were employees and held company stock. T

      This goes back to privilege. Companies who have an exponential amount of money have the ability to hire researchers to "research" their product. If researchers are getting paid to give a favorable report of certain drugs then they are going to do just that.

    1. Women still are not publishing, though, in the same proportion as they are present in academe as professors.

      I think that this is very interesting and should be related to the article about global scholarly communication. Not only is the global north dominating the conversation, but the global northern men. Women are having a hard time when in comes to having a voice in knowledge production in similar ways to those from the global south

    2. women cluster into certain subfields

      I think that this is a result of certain jobs being seen as "feminine" and "masculine." I think that biological and mathematical sciences have been seen as more "masculine," which could explain the under-representation of women in this field.

    3. the researchers found that the proportion has increased as more women have entered the professoriate.

      I would be interested to see the timing of when the increase occurred (if it was slowly over time and/or after large social changes such as around 1970 when it was prohibited for employers to discriminate based on sex).

    4. In addition, studies show that women spend less time on research and more time on teaching and committee work.

      this is interesting that women are more focused on the human interaction portion of academe

    5. In a subfield labeled "household decision-making," however, the proportion of female authors shot way up, to 30 percent.

      similar to my comment on examining only female dominated fields of work! it shows that women are still sort of locked in certain spheres of work!

    6. over the entire 345 years, 22 percent of all authors were female.

      this is wild to me! women deserve to get the bargaining power in all fields of work- to have an equal chance with men!

    7. But women may not be as confident and have as much experience as men with those negotiations

      everyone should check out the book Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg! It encourages women to lean in to the table instead of leaning out from the conversation in the workplace- negotiating for yourself!

    8. What we've done is assemble this huge collection of data across many of the major scientific, social-science, and humanities fields, providing a new lens for looking at how gender plays out in scholarly authorship,

      I love this idea for research- that they did not even stick to just typically female associated fields of work- it is important to understand who is studying what before we could adjust to compensate for these differences

    9. Were women and men equal in this fundamental coin of the academic realm, a currency that buys tenure, promotions, and career success

      I did a project on women in leadership roles (mostly female CEOs) but it is interesting that it is mentioned that publishing buys tenure, promotions, and success (you can tell sort of by where this article is going men and women will not be equal)

    10. From 1990 to 2010, the percentage of female authors went up to 27 percent.

      This is a very promising statistic. I would love to know how much it will go up form 2010 to 2020. I think it is also a good sign that when using the newest formats of MLA and APA that you abbreviate the first name of the author (in the citation) in order to eliminate any sort of gender bias.

    11. October 22, 2012

      Considering this article was written seven years ago, I would love to see how things have changed/progressed in this time. Would be nice to see a follow up article of sorts.

    12. In 2010 alone, the last year for which full figures are available, the proportion had inched up to 30 percent. "The results show us what a lot of people have been saying and many of my female colleagues have been feeling," says Ms. Jacquet. "Things are getting better for women in academia."

      This was very reassuring to read. I'm glad the author can confidently speak to the progress that has been made thus far. There is, however, still a long way to go.

    13. But women may not be as confident and have as much experience as men with those negotiations

      Many women experience this in so many different industries. I know many argue that the gender wage gap is in part due to the fact that many women are less experienced in negotiating salaries. The confidence factor has a lot to do with it!

    14. Author order is very important.

      This is something completely new to me. I did not know this much weight was placed on author order so this was an interesting part to read.

    15. To be hired on the tenure track in those fields by a top research university, young scholars increasingly must have publications on their CV's by the time they finish their doctoral degrees. And once they are hired, more publications in leading journals typically are required to be promoted at every step along the way to full professor.

      This is the kind of compounding effect I touched on in my previous annotation. A person pursuing a career in academia has to have a few publishing credits under their belt in order to progress in their career. If this individual wants to pursue a tenure track in higher ed. having several published journals is almost imperative, so this inequality is bigger than just the publication world.

    16. To Ms. Jacquet's surprise, Mr. West and Mr. Bergstrom took her idea and ran with it.

      This was really nice to read because seldom is this ever the case, I'm glad they found value in the research proposal made by Ms. Jacquet.

    17. Were women and men equal in this fundamental coin of the academic realm, a currency that buys tenure, promotions, and career success?

      This is very well put. There are so many compounding results from getting published and the gender gap that exists with this level of "achievement" manifests in all sorts of arenas.

    18. Bergstrom's evolutionary-biology lab at the University of Washington last year, she was surrounded by men.

      Stem fields are primarily made up with men. I feel this too in my classes.

    19. It found that science professors at six major research universities were likely to rate male job candidates as more qualified than female candidates to be hired as laboratory managers, even though the study assigned the hypothetical male and female applicants identical qualifications.

      On campus if you look at the majority of science professors, they're males. Men are given a privilege and women continually face bias.

    20. "If I were to give people a vita of two people who had the exact same number of publications and one person was first author on a lot of papers and the other had publications in the same journals but was second through fourth author, I guarantee you people will prefer first,

      This is a big problem in academia. Even the name placing on a published article can alter your chances of a job in academia. This isn't particularly fair but this is how it works.

    21. To be hired on the tenure track in those fields by a top research university, young scholars increasingly must have publications on their CV's by the time they finish their doctoral degrees.

      This is kind of the point that I brought up in my last annotation. To get jobs in academia you have to be published a certain amount of times just to prove yourself.

    22. Scholarly publishing, more than anything else, is the measuring stick of professors' research productivity.

      I've been hearing a lot that department chairs, especially in the social sciences, hire professors based on if they think that they will publish books and articles. I remember eating lunch with new candidates for one department here at Wake Forest, and there was a very competitive candidate that was graduating from a very well known university but they didn't pick her because they didn't believe she would produce the most research. I think it is disheartening that we base jobs on their research productivity, instead of potential but this is how academia works.

    1. we should be doing the same in our scholarly communication discourse. The conversation needs to be an actual conversation and not a one-way soliloquy from the global north that gets imported colonial-style to the global south. There needs to be a dialogue, real dialogue, that decenters white North American and Western European values and knowledge creation.

      This is extremely important because if the conversation is dominated by the global north, then the knowledge that is produced "globally" will just be a reflection of the global northern thought and will diminish the thought of the global south. This idea of global knowledge will just result in diminished ideals and will allow the global north to further dominate knowledge production.

    2. rom my colleague from India, I learned that researchers must do all they can to publish in the big name Western journals if they wish to maintain their careers; the concept of authors rights and open access advocacy have little place when researchers are literally fighting to survive in the field.

      I think that this statement brings to light the flaws in the system of research and knowledge production. Knowledge production should not be a result of people conforming to the system and doing whatever they can to be heard, but rather a result of people listening to shared experiences. There has to be a way to validate knowledge production and not only discrimination impacts who gets heard, but also the western journal companies (which are not mutually exclusive).

    3. decolonizing these conversations

      this is something I have never really thought about though- the colonization of scholarly research and conversation

    4. we should be doing the same in our scholarly communication discourse. The conversation needs to be an actual conversation and not a one-way soliloquy from the global north that gets imported colonial-style to the global south

      i think this is such a huge problem in almost every field of study- the domination of the north over the south- it creates this one way and extremely limiting flow of thought

    5. even if/when they have fellow Latin American colleagues whose work is more on point.

      This is very sad- just because work does not come from the wester world or north America does not mean that work is not valid or useful- we are simply denying the use of good and valid thought based on who it is coming from.

    6. more than half of the attendees left the main room, including all of the attendees from the global south and virtually all of the attendees of color.

      this clearly shows that these topics are not "fringe" if more than half of the people are leaving the room

    7. While there were several people present from other knowledge traditions—and the group leaders congratulated themselves again and again during the course of the meeting on the “diversity of voices” at the table

      perhaps working to integrate these other knowledge traditions would lead to a more interesting application of knowledge principles.Allowing these people that make the group diverse to actually have part in the conversation could greatly increase our ability to generate new thought.

    8. Maybe instead of always having these kind of meetings in places like Madrid or San Diego, let’s schedule events in Dhaka or Lilongwe

      I think this is a really wise idea for a variety of reasons. First of all, as the author previously stated, if you are a researcher from somewhere far outside the US you have to travel long and far just to attend the conference (meaning more attendees will be from the US leading to less diversity in conversation and viewpoints). Also, the gesture to have one of these meetings in a place like Dhaka or Lilongwe I think can have a big impact on the research community and school of thought as well.

    9. Those of us from the global north need to acknowledge the harm our neoliberal colonizing has done to scholarship around the world and take responsibility.

      I like how Hathcock mentions here the need for recognition of the damages left behind long after the end of colonial rule. A lot of our institutions especially in academia, are rooted in racial authority.

    10. I learned from my Latin American colleagues that they are essentially forced to cite North American or Western European researchers in all their work in order to get published, even if/when they have fellow Latin American colleagues whose work is more on point.

      This is a very saddening reality. Only recognizing western work inherently de-values the minds of non-western persons.

    11. This scholarly communication conversation, like virtually all other scholarly communication conversations, was centered around, directed by, and saturated in the values and ideals of the white North American and Western European, neoliberal researcher.

      This is such a palpable statement. I think a lot of what we consider scholarly conversation is centered around one school of thought, one in which not everyone involved feels represented or even well informed about. I think about how history itself is written by the "victors", and how many important stories are lost to time because a vast majority of people were not afforded the opportunity to voice their truth. Similarly, scholarly discourse can sometimes leave out the topics, figures, or historical events that are important to many but not recognized as much by the writers of our history books. Diversity is important both through the voices in the room, as well as the topics discussed