“OI often hear that people only read the first sentence, the ‘headline’ (headline) because they don’t want to pay, but those who only see the ‘headline’ cannot fully see the story, nor do they know what true news is” , said the ‘president & global media literacy educator’ of the International Council for Media Literacy Belinha de Abreu, speaking to Lusa.

The specialist, who was speaking on the sidelines of the conference “Trust in journalism, escape disinformation”, which took place at the headquarters of Lusa, in Lisbon, defended that people have to better choose the information they want to have access to and that, this, implies , often pay for the news.

Belinha de Abreu also mentioned that, nowadays, young people already believe that everything is disinformation, but they do not know how to distinguish an opinion from news.

“Young people need to listen to different people. Talk to other nationalities so they know that the world is bigger (…) and if they also use social networks and the internet in that sense, they will realize that there are different ways of thinking”, he added.

For Commander Santos Fernandes, head of the planning division of the General Staff of the Navy, mistrust is more associated with old age, while young people “need immediate action in which almost everything is understood as a fact”.

In this context, Santos Fernandes believes that artificial intelligence will assume a dual role, since it can be “a tool for the misinformer, but also for those who fight misinformation”.

Researcher Vítor Tomé, who also participated in the conference organized by Lusa, said that journalism and journalists can assume different roles in the fight against ‘fake news’ (disinformation).

This starts with “doing your job, using new tools. The second (role) is explaining the production process: how did you get here? How did we do this? Show people (…) that it’s about trustworthy and reliable information”, he underlined.

On the other hand, as he pointed out, journalists also have the function of trainers of the population, it being “essential” that these professionals are part of media literacy projects.

“People have no idea what it’s like to do journalism and often confuse the Beira road with the side of the road. Citizen journalism is not journalism. Journalism is something else, it has certain rules and requires a professional license” , noticed.

Asked about the existence of sufficient resources to carry out this work, Vítor Tomé mentioned that there is a shortage of financial and human resources, but considered that it is necessary “to do what is possible” with what is available.

At the conference, the documentary “Trust Me”, by the American Roko Belic, was shown, which addresses disinformation in the digital age, using testimonials from scientists, government officials, psychologists and journalists.

“Trust Me” warns of how the public can detect the manipulation of sources and information, filtering what is factual and what is not, and thus preventing the proliferation of ‘fake news’.

Also Read: WHO accuses Elon Musk of spreading ‘fake news’

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