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The fake news infodemic vs information literacy

Oluwole Olumide Durodolu (University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa, and University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria)
Samuel Kelechukwu Ibenne (Department of Library and Information Science, Abia State University, Uturu, Nigeria)

Library Hi Tech News

ISSN: 0741-9058

Article publication date: 10 June 2020

Issue publication date: 8 September 2020

1175

Abstract

Purpose

With growing dependency on social media for reportage, coupled with rising media errors with potential to threatening the boundaries of knowledge and reliable information, attention is now being drawn to credibility of using social media and other media outlet. This increasing attention is because of the apparent disorderliness in the information milieu as a result of powerlessness to regulate activities on social media coupled with the dilemma of tampering with fundamental right of individual to free speech. Unlike the traditional media houses with specific address and location, identifying the whereabouts of promoters of fake news is challenging as information can be manufactured at the remote locality and the consequence will be felt in all the four compass points of the world. Tracking down individuals peddling fake news for charges of slander, defamation or libel is difficult, as a result of the intercontinental nature of the social network.

Design/methodology/approach

This study used a qualitative research design, which is guided by the interpretive paradigm because it relies comprehensively on practical methods of content analysis in which concepts are discussed to convey an in-depth understanding of the topic being investigated and bringing new knowledge.

Findings

Ensuring that the citizenry is adequately information literate is sine qua non for reducing the threats posed by fake news access and use to the barest minimum. Ibenne (2016) notes that becoming information literate is a process that leads to empowerment of the individual to take rationally elevated decisions in information use and knowledge application. The authors may therefore conclude that falling prey to fake news plays majorly on ignorance among the citizenry, and on the other hand, irrational use of information. When citizens possess functional information literacy, they are able to subject the information they receive to critical evaluation to eliminate the undesirable, which fake news squarely fall under.

Originality/value

This paper sheds light on assessing the fake news infodemic as information disorder and a threat to reliable information access and use; therefore, information acquired from this study is imaginative and valuable to better understand how information professionals react to official and personal engagement.

Keywords

Citation

Durodolu, O.O. and Ibenne, S.K. (2020), "The fake news infodemic vs information literacy", Library Hi Tech News, Vol. 37 No. 7, pp. 13-14. https://doi.org/10.1108/LHTN-03-2020-0020

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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