Category: Blog Post

  • Evaluating misinformation education tools

    Quinlan Forrest / April 5, 2026 / MC0 427

    What tools can we use to counter misinformation? This is a question that many people are asking. Some of the most effective tools I have discovered including RumorGuard and the game titled Get Bad News. In this post I will be showing and documenting how these tools work. I will even include a video showing Get Bad News, which I personally find to be a very fun game. 

     

    Rumor Guard


    The National Literacy Project created RumorGuard in 2022 to help people learn how to spot disinformation. The website offers lessons, quizzes, and tutorials. The site was designed in a way that is accessible to people of all ages.

    RumorGuard contains techniques for spotting misinformation, as well as giving readers examples of disinformation that has occurred online. My favorite article they wrote discussed claims circulating online that Hurricane Milton was “geoengineered” by the government for some reason.

    The article tells us that the picture, which is a still photo of a video (seen below), wasn’t even filmed during Hurricane Milton. In actuality, it was filmed in 2021—three years before the hurricane occurred. It also didn’t depict a hurricane but instead showed asperitas cloud formations—which are rare but entirely natural.

    From: RumorGuard

    Geoengineering is real and is a way to manipulate the environment to manage and mitigate the effects of climate change. However, there is no evidence geoengineering has been used for nefarious purposes. Partly because geoengineering is still largely conceptual and implemented on a small scale at this time.

    According to RearGuard, we should use five different factors for determining disinformation. These factors include authenticity, sources, evidence, context, and reasoning. Here is what they say:

    Authenticity (Is it genuine?)

    Description: Misinformation often includes doctored or fabricated images and videos.

    Strategy: Use reverse image websites, like Google Images or TinEye, to determine if the image matches the time and date of the original post. You can also use tools like FotoForensic to determine if a photo has been altered. 

    Source (Is it credible?)

    Description: Misinformation often comes from unknown or unreliable sources.

    Strategy: Investigate the “About Us” section of a website. Find out who runs the website and determine if they have credibility. Verify if an outlet is reputable using the Ad Fontes Media chart.

    Evidence (Is it supported by facts?)

    Description: Misinformation and disinformation are often distorted and outdated evidence.

    Strategy: Look for direct links to documents, records, or scholarly papers. Research who the author is and determine their background. Try to determine if a claim can be backed up with multiple sources.

    Context (Is the context accurate?)

    Description: One of the most common forms of misinformation is called “false context.” Often, pictures in posts containing misinformation may be real and unaltered; however, the context surrounding them is incorrect.

    Strategy: To determine the original date of an image or video, utilize reverse image searching or employ a program like MediaInfo to examine the metadata, which may include the creation date of the video. However, be aware that metadata can be modified.

    Reasoning (Is it based on sound logic?)

    Description: Misinformation often relies on flawed reasoning, logical fallacies, or appeals to emotion.

    Strategy: Ask yourself if a claim is reasonable or logical. Take, for example, the conspiracy that the Moon landing was fake. It’s preposterous to think that a program that involved more than 400,000 engineers, physicists, technicians, and contractors was fake and that no one who worked on the Apollo program ever spoke out.

    Bad News


    Bad News is an interactive game that teaches us about fake news and disinformation from the perspective of a “disinformation tycoon.” This game was personally my favorite tool for learning because it kinda let me pretend to be evil.

    Note: The claim that Trump threatened Canada

  • 24 Hour Media Diet

    Quinlan Forrest / March 27, 2026 / MCO 427

    9:30 a.m. — Wake up and go on YouTube and watch “The Red Thread by The Official Channel. The specific episode is about Raëlism, a new age UFO religion that is often described as a cult. I watched about half of the three-hour-long video.

    10:00 a.m. — Make coffee and oatmeal with honey and cinnamon. I would eat my breakfast while scrolling through Instagram. I was mostly messaging friends and sending them memes. Some posts I encountered discussed the Iran war and suggested that President Trump initiated the conflict to divert attention from the Epstein files. People were calling it “Operation Epstein Fury.” While this theory is technically possible, there is no definitive evidence.

    12:00 a.m. — Sit down and scroll through Twitter, and I see a post titled “It’s not just Gaza: Israel is also committing genocide in the West Bank,” by The Nation. The article’s author, Ahmad Ibsais, believes that Israel is committing genocide in the West Bank. He points to killings, forced displacement, sexual violence, and the creation of conditions to make life nearly impossible for Palestinians. I read the full article.

    4:00 p.m.— Browse Twitter, and see a post about a propane tank explosion in Toronto on the roof of a large building. RTN Toronto, an online news platform dedicated to “Toronto content,” made the post. Multiple commenters speculated that the explosion was a terrorist attack, possibly by Iran, or it was a false-flag attack by Mossad agents. Neither claim is supported by evidence, and while it’s uncommon, there are various ways a propane tank can ignite and explode without human intervention. I moved on and read some emails.

    5:40 p.m. — While scrolling Instagram reels, I see a post about a man named “Palm Beach Pete.” His real name is Pete Simel, and he has an uncanny resemblance to Jeffrey Epstein, and this has made conspiracy theories speculate that Simel is Epstein in disguise. For their “evidence,” they point out the resemblance and the fact that both Simel and Epstein lived in Palm Beach, Florida. It ties into the conspiracy theory that Epstein faked his death. There’s absolutely no evidence that Simel is Jefferey Epstein.

    6:00 p.m. — My sister sends me a meme post on Instagram about the online “celebrity” known as Clavicular, Braden Eric Peters, being arrested in Florida, and the author of the post, kbtheginger, makes fun of Clavicular for being 5 feet 11 inches. A post from a comedy page on Instagram is not a reliable source; however, in this case, some of the information turned out to be true. Clavicular was arrested in Florida on battery charges.

    This detail, however, might be wrong. The details of his arrest were removed from the Fort Lauderdale Sheriff’s Department website. However, by using the Wayback Machine, it reveals that his arrest records list his height as 6 feet 1 inch. I liked the post, despite the information about his height being wrong. It was still funny.

    11:00 p.m.—Watch YouTube video titled “Trump PANIC DELAYS Iranian Attack As Markets Tumble,” by Breaking Points. The video is about President Trump’s 10-day extension regarding a deadline for attacking Iran’s power infrastructure and how his actions might be influenced by market conditions. The video insinuates that because of higher-than-normal bond yields and increasing crude oil prices. Despite the clickbait headline, Breaking Points is led by seasoned journalists such as Ryan Grim, Emily Jashinsky, and Crystal Ball. Liked the video and moved on.

    Reflection

    As a journalist with a Gen Z background, I’m glued to online media. The sources I rely on for information primarily come from Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter, which is not surprising, given that many people my age do the same. I noticed that I mostly get my information from left-wing sources, which aligns with me politically. But I do like Breaking Points, as the two main hosts are politically different. Crystal Ball is a democratic socialist, and Saagar Enjeti is a populist conservative. I feel that media like this helps me get out of the echo chambers that are all too common online.