iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Timothy Karr

GET UPDATES FROM Timothy Karr
 

The Internet as Political Lie Detector

Posted: 10/12/2012 1:33 pm

In a year of misleading political attack ads and distracted television newscasters, the Internet may offer salvation for voters seeking the truth.

A new Google poll found that 64 percent of battleground-state voters have used the Internet to fact-check the candidates in 2012.

They may have gone online after tuning out local television news, which has largely taken a pass on vetting the claims made in political ads they air. Two recent Free Press studies found that newscasters at stations in the most heavily saturated markets have failed to investigate the shadowy groups that place local political ads -- or to question the content of the ads themselves.

A Free Press' study of political ads in Milwaukee found that stations in May devoted 53 news segments to Justin Bieber while offering zero analysis of the groups behind political ads flooding local airwaves.

It's gotten so bad that Edward Wasserman, dean of UC Berkeley's journalism school, wrote that the groups that buy TV ads "appear to have purchased not just airtime, but immunity from media scrutiny."

The Misinformation Machine

This wouldn't be a problem if these ads told the truth. But a survey by the Annenberg Public Policy Center and the Center for Responsive Politics found that 85 percent of the money spent on presidential ads by the four top-spending third-party groups financed deceptive ads.

The Google poll suggests that for many the Internet is becoming a haven from television lies -- a place where people can ask specific political questions and, in the best scenarios, search out correct answers. Aside from Google searches, there are many useful sites for this including FactCheck.org, Politifact.com and the wiki WeCheck.org.

But that shouldn't release local newscasts from their obligation to cover contentious political issues and call out those who use local airwaves to deceive.

Indeed, TV is where the fact-checking obligation should be the greatest. Most people cite television as their primary source for news and information, and most political speech still takes place on broadcast TV.

And while it's true that the Internet is increasing its share of the overall audience for news, television remains our most influential communications medium: A 2011 Pew Research Center survey found that more Americans report watching local TV than any other source for news -- more than the number that rely on newspapers, radio or, even, the Internet.

For this reason, TV remains extremely popular with those seeking to manipulate public opinion. Media analysts project political ad buys to exceed $3.3 billion by Election Day. That figure dwarves all estimates of online political ad spending.

Perhaps that's why more people in battleground states are turning to the Internet in search of the truth.

The Digital Divide

But this online escape hatch is not available to all Americans. Fast, reliable broadband remains a luxury beyond the reach of many of those who live in rural and low-income communities.

According to the Commerce Department, 72 percent of Caucasians have Internet access at home, compared to only 55 percent of African Americans and 57 percent of Hispanic households. Only four out of every 10 households with incomes below $25,000 and only 50 percent of rural residents have wired home Internet access.

Television access, on the other hand, is available in 97.1 percent of U.S. households, according to Nielsen. (For more on this divide, read Deepak Bhargava and Helen Brunner's excellent article in the Hill).

Until we achieve universal and open Internet access in America, over-the-air television will remain the dominant force in politics.

And while the Internet may prove to be a useful lie detector in the 2012 elections, that's no excuse for stations that have ducked responsibility for political truth-telling.

 

Follow Timothy Karr on Twitter: www.twitter.com/TimKarr

FOLLOW TECH
In a year of misleading political attack ads and distracted television newscasters, the Internet may offer salvation for voters seeking the truth. A new Google poll found that 64 percent of battlegr...
In a year of misleading political attack ads and distracted television newscasters, the Internet may offer salvation for voters seeking the truth. A new Google poll found that 64 percent of battlegr...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 14
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
06:39 PM on 10/15/2012
Television rakes in untold millions during presidential campaigns. The investigating could still work if print and other media kept tabs on the marketing of false ads. The same can be said of television they could investigate print and other media for accuracy. There is hope, even if there is little evidence of it.
photo
Computer Geek
Logician Atheist Lefty
09:49 AM on 10/14/2012
You can't rely on all websites however. I've seen people quote either left or right websites and I ignore those (even though I'm a lefty). I want the truth, no matter whether it fits my ideology or not. Wikipedia tries to police it's articles (sometimes they cannot be viewed as accurate by comparing what they have to other sources - people will alter it and sometimes it will take a while for the misinformation to be corrected) but more often than not they are a good source. CBO (Congressional Budget Office) and in fact all government sources are non-partisan by law so they are a good source. It takes time and it takes having an open mind which unfortunately many do not. They choose Drudge Report or some other slanted organization to verify and those aren't reliable. They are worse than no information because you are getting lies and distortions instead of the unvarnished truth. But even factcheck.org and some of the fact checkers 'read' into what is said to conclude some things and that isn't going to be entirely accurate either. They are the ones now trying to define what the word 'is' is now. Be very careful about supposedly 'expert' think tankes as well. Many are funded by people like the Koch brothers and they are after a desired outcome, not the truth.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark B Robertson
10:18 AM on 10/13/2012
Anyone who sees an political advert (any side) should assume there are lies involved and check, double-check, to see is telling the most truth (PS don't expect 100% truth - and if this fantasy happens tell everyone!!!!)
photo
moviefantastic
The truth shall set you free
08:51 PM on 10/12/2012
I couldn't agree with you more. It's important to do your research - but - the media should be the watchdog of the republic -

I guess that's why Public Television is the most respected.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mgray34
Fighting ignorance one post at a time.
05:13 PM on 10/12/2012
If this year's campaigns were solely based on facts we would be preparing the Capital now for the re-election of Barack Obama.

And the media would be twiddling their thumbs. It's in their best interests to hope for a close race.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
04:18 PM on 10/12/2012
Well, why do you think that they wanted to set up Internet toll booths in the latter part of the 2000s and beyond? The Internet is too powerful a tool for them to control otherwise.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moose Luck 99
GEOENGINEERINGWATCH DOT ORG
03:19 PM on 10/12/2012
WE LOVE YOU TIM CARR :)

http://www.infowars.com/tsa-agents-revolt-over-body-scanner-radiation-exposure/

“Radiation just invokes a lot of fear.” she added.

According to the USA Today report, several TSA employees have expressed their concerns to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):

…a TSA employee at an unidentified airport asked CDC in June to examine concerns about radiation exposures from standing near the new full-body X-ray scanners for hours a day. The CDC said it didn’t have authority to do a hazard assessment unless three or more current employees at one location made a joint request, according to a September letter from the CDC to the unnamed worker. The CDC provided the letter to USA TODAY.

Despite claiming that the body scanners and baggage scanners emit safe doses of radiation and are routinely inspected, the TSA has refused to release its radiation inspection records.

Worse still, an independent study by the CDC carried out in 2004, found that some baggage scanners were in violation of federal radiation standards, and were emitting two or three times beyond the agreed safe limit.

A further 2008 CDC report noted that some x-ray machines were missing protective lead curtains or had had safety features disabled by TSA employees with duct tape, paper towels and other material
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Sue Wilson
Broadcast Blues Director, Media Action Center fndr
03:03 PM on 10/12/2012
Activists in my hometown of Sacramento are meeting personally with TV station management, asking them to fact check third party ads. If they do not, the stations may well face the wrath of boycotts.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moose Luck 99
GEOENGINEERINGWATCH DOT ORG
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
10:40 PM on 10/12/2012
Get them to show the results.

Then get the people to start boycotting any station that allows lies to be broadcast.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Sue Wilson
Broadcast Blues Director, Media Action Center fndr
04:28 PM on 10/13/2012
We the People legally own the broadcast airwaves;  in exchange for their using our airwaves, stations make a deal to "serve the public interest."  But the public has been an absentee landlord, and it's time to knock on the tenant's door.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marie Russell-Barker
Grandmother, Greatgrandmother.
02:36 PM on 10/12/2012
Oh how I agree with this article. I have seen lies half truth being told on the tube since the beginning of this political season began. What ever happened to a hand shake and your word as your bond. Television came along and taught us all a thing or two. The owners of these stations owe their viewers the truth instead its money money by sayings I didn't say it do not make them responsible its on their stations and before something is aired it should be checked for truth.
02:10 PM on 10/12/2012
Trying to Expose Secret Courts in Minnesota www.sharonsenate64.blogspot.com Thanks