YouTube aids flat earth conspiracy theorists, research suggests
Source: BBC
YouTube aids flat earth conspiracy theorists, research suggests
18 February 2019
YouTube is playing a significant role in convincing some people that the Earth is flat, research suggests.
A study quizzed people at flat earth conferences and found most cited videos viewed on the site as a key influence.
They were won over by videos which claimed to amass evidence proving the Earth was not a spherical planet.
YouTube needed to do a better job of ensuring visitors get accurate information alongside such videos, said the researcher behind the study.
"There's a lot of helpful information on YouTube but also a lot of misinformation," Prof Asheley Landrum from Texas Tech University, who carried out the study, told The Guardian.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-47279253
______________________________________________________________________
Source: The Guardian
Study blames YouTube for rise in number of Flat Earthers
Conspiracy theories shown on video-sharing site persuade people to doubt Earth is round
Ian Sample Science editor
Sun 17 Feb 2019 20.30 GMT
-snip-
Their suspicion was raised when they attended the worlds largest gatherings of Flat Earthers at the movements annual conference in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 2017, and then in Denver, Colorado, last year.
Interviews with 30 attendees revealed a pattern in the stories people told about how they came to be convinced that the Earth was not a large round rock spinning through space but a large flat disc doing much the same thing.
Of the 30, all but one said they had not considered the Earth to be flat two years ago but changed their minds after watching videos promoting conspiracy theories on YouTube. The only person who didnt say this was there with his daughter and his son-in-law and they had seen it on YouTube and told him about it, said Asheley Landrum, who led the research at Texas Tech University.
The interviews revealed that most had been watching videos about other conspiracies, with alternative takes on 9/11, the Sandy Hook school shooting and whether Nasa really went to the moon, when YouTube offered up Flat Earth videos for them to watch next.
Some said they watched the videos only in order to debunk them but soon found themselves won over by the material.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/feb/17/study-blames-youtube-for-rise-in-number-of-flat-earthers
GemDigger
(4,327 posts)Flat earther pieces and it had only been posted for 2 days and already had over 100k views. I can't remember the name of it but it had the word "new" in it. New Flat Earth of something like that.
TreasonousBastard
(43,049 posts)especially if you don't know basic science. Debunking them means explaining optics, gravity, geometry, and other good stuff and makes said debunking too complicated and boring for the believers.
I'm not sure what, if any, the answer is.
SWBTATTReg
(24,085 posts)blah blah blah ... proving that the world is still full of idiots and fools who are easily misled by claims that are repurposed in such a fashion to appear realistic and 'real'. The 'end times' is a very common theme. Seems like everyday, there is a whole flood of these out there. All filled with different dates, different scenarios, etc. There aren't enough earths laying around!!
But You Tube also has lots of good videos, DIY videos, historical tidbits of news, documentaries, tons and tons of good valid stuff. One could never run out of valid, fact filled videos right and left.
As we all do, we ignore the crap that's out there and instead, watch the valid, good stuff that is put out there by reputable persons/companies and worth the time and energy to watch. Other nonsense is just that, nonsense. Don't waste your time. After a while, people will tire of these so called doomsday end time videos, flat earth, center of earth is occupied by an advanced race of beings, etc. etc. In a way, these 'bad' videos are destroying themselves (bad predictions which never never come true, etc.). Also, I suspect that some of them will lead to lawsuits and such, being misleading and full of incorrect facts that others may act upon when they shouldn't.