{"id":111182,"date":"2018-03-31T20:20:44","date_gmt":"2018-03-31T19:20:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/buzzsouthafrica.com\/?p=111182"},"modified":"2020-05-21T12:13:58","modified_gmt":"2020-05-21T11:13:58","slug":"fake-news-south-africa","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/buzzsouthafrica.com\/fake-news-south-africa\/","title":{"rendered":"The Rise Of Fake News In South Africa: Here’s All You Need To Know"},"content":{"rendered":"
A few years ago, “fake news” was a term many South Africans weren’t conversant with. But in recent times, the term has become an everyday\u00a0phrase and a serious threat to South African democracy and free expression in the country.<\/p>\n
Like the weather which everybody talks about but doesn’t do anything about it, we’ve seen several regimes and prestigious organizations lament about the deliberate publication of misleading information and hoaxes on the internet. But sadly, none of them has been able to boldly confront the menace or at least take notable steps with the aim of curbing the ‘disaster’.<\/p>\n
There are a thousand reasons why fake news is being pushed to the forefront in South Africa in recent time. It’s been found that the so-called publishers, most times, dish out misleading headlines for financial gains.<\/p>\n
And because most people don’t know that fake news is deliberately written and published with the aim to mislead in order to ruin the reputation of a person, organization, government, they easily fall for it,\u00a0swallowing information from these sites hook, line, and sinker.<\/p>\n
Like most countries, South Africa has more than its fair share of unfair news coverage from fake\u00a0news sites and with the frightening speed at which these sites are springing up, they could end up ruining the country and impacting the reputation we built with our sweat and integrity.<\/p>\n
As South Africa would have us believe, the emergence and subsequent relevance of fake news stories in the country can be traced back to the explosive maturation of social media and the exploration of advanced technology on the internet.<\/p>\n
Along with this boom, news propaganda, and shallow journalism, South Africa began feasting on a buffet of fake news and misleading information about the government, people, and agencies.<\/p>\n
With the rise and exploration of social media platforms like Twitter, Whatsapp and Facebook, the dissemination of fake stories became very easy and uncontrollable.<\/p>\n
A lot of fake news sites have been uncovered in South Africa. Basically pushed out to control people’s choices and opinion, some of these stories generated conflict, confusion, and indecision on the side of readers as most of their victims were top government officials and notable people in the country.<\/p>\n
For instance, on January 9, 2018, a certain South African website\u00a0pushed out\u00a0a shocking headline\u00a0that Jacob Zuma\u00a0had stepped down as South Africa’s president<\/a>, causing the rand to rapidly take to the air, and then slump after curious investors dug out the truth.<\/p>\n The fake website,\u00a0which reportedly launched the lengthy and detailed story AllAfricaNews.co.za, is said to have mimicked AllAfrica.com, a genuine news site and also claimed that Zuma officially made the announcement himself on national television.<\/p>\n The process of uncovering the fake news sites in South Africa has seen Pretorialive, blackopinion.co.za,\u00a0African News Updates, iMzansi, News24-TV, Live Monitor and Nationalnewsbulletin.com named as misleading sites.<\/p>\n Away from its impact on news credibility, there’s this trend of South African politicians resorting to fake news as a mechanism to discredit the media. While it’s true that there was a time the media were truthbearers and\u00a0communicators of\u00a0relevant happenings, throwing back\u00a0most stories perceived to be ‘false’\u00a0at\u00a0the media has in one or the other helped in generating different versions of a report and keeping the readers in a confused state of mind. Politicians must accept the fact that there are still genuine news websites that have pitched their tents very far away from hoaxes.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Over the years,\u00a0false propaganda and news stories have dealt a great blow in the South African politics and have seen take deadly risks just to clear their names.<\/p>\n Interestingly, fake news is not exclusive to South Africa and Africa alone. Some time in 2016, just before the US election, more than 140 fake news websites<\/a>, were uncovered by\u00a0Buzzfeed’s media editor, Craig Silverman and his friend. These sites were found to have turned fake news into a profitable business template.<\/p>\n Just a few weeks ago, in February 2018, to be precise, a major headline that Russia’s Vladimir Putin was scheduled to meet former president Jacob Zuma in South Africa hit the shores of the country and beyond. It turned out that the news was false as it was debunked by the Russian embassy.<\/p>\n Sometime in December 2017, reports were all over the town that a zombie drug called ‘flakka’ was being sold, manufactured and consumed in South Africa. This report left many Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban, ill at ease. After thorough investigations, the Hawks found no evidence backing the claim, dismissing the story as false.<\/p>\n South Africans were left speechless in February 2017 after it was reported that Miss South Africa Ntandoyenkosi Kunene was caught with cocaine in her possession in the United Kingdom.<\/p>\nHere are 4 fake news stories that have hit South Africa in Recent Times<\/strong><\/h2>\n
1. Vladimir’s visit to South Africa<\/strong><\/h3>\n
2. Flakka drug<\/strong><\/h3>\n
3. Miss South Africa’s arrest<\/strong><\/h3>\n