Audio By Carbonatix
The appearance of fake news on websites and social media has inspired scientists to develop a "vaccine" to immunise people against the problem.
A University of Cambridge study devised psychological tools to target fact distortion.
Researchers suggest "pre-emptively exposing" readers to a small "dose" of the misinformation can help organisations cancel out bogus claims.
Stories on the US election and Syria are among those to have caused concern.
"Misinformation can be sticky, spreading and replicating like a virus," said the University of Cambridge study's lead author Dr Sander van der Linden.
"The idea is to provide a cognitive repertoire that helps build up resistance to misinformation, so the next time people come across it they are less susceptible."
The study, published in the journal Global Challenges, was conducted as a disguised experiment.
More than 2,000 US residents were presented with two claims about global warming.
The researchers say when presented consecutively, the influence well-established facts had on people were cancelled out by bogus claims made by campaigners.
But when information was combined with misinformation, in the form of a warning, the fake news had less resonance.
Fabricated stories alleging the Pope was backing Donald Trump and his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton sold weapons to the so-called Islamic State group were read and shared by millions of Facebook users during the US election campaign.
The world's largest social network later announced new features to help combat fabricated news stories, and there is pressure on Google and Twitter to do more to tackle the issue.
Meanwhile, German officials have reportedly proposed creating a special government unit to combat fake news in the run-up to this year's general election, while a senior Labour MP only last week warned that British politics risks being "infected by the contagion".
Latest Stories
-
South Korea’s ex-President Yoon given life in prison for insurrection
2 minutes -
Take advantage of growing opportunities in agriculture – Deputy Agric Minister tells youth
6 minutes -
NACOC steps up K9 Operations at Kotoka International Airport to curb drug trafficking
10 minutes -
Ken Ofori-Atta bond hearing comes up today as US Judge demands extradition proof
31 minutes -
NDC wishes Muslim community peaceful and blessed Ramadan
46 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Thursday, February 19, 2026
50 minutes -
One year rent advance is fair – GREDA Executive Secretary backs new rent bill
1 hour -
What should e-commerce sellers check before expanding into new markets?
2 hours -
Minority calls for stronger human rights safeguards in Security Bill
2 hours -
Two killed, 14 injured in accident on Ho–Aflao Highway
2 hours -
Surveillance provisions in Security Bill ‘deeply troubling’ – Minority
2 hours -
Security Bill risks politicisation and weak financial accountability – Minority
2 hours -
Churches to be monitored via digital registry – Local Gov’t MinisterÂ
2 hours -
Security Bill flawed; centralises excessive power in presidency – Minority
3 hours -
Pressure will mount on Gold Board model as BoG exits gold trade financing – Finance Prof
3 hours
