A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Sep 16, 2018

A Majority of Americans Get News From Social Media - But They Don't Expect It To Be Accurate

And they also cite 'inaccuracy' as their greatest dislike about news from social media.

So why do they bother? Convenience and timeliness are factors, but the results suggest they derive their opinions from a variety of sources and are weighing the relative inputs against their own belief systems. Which, depending on their values, education and other sources may - or may not - be good news. JL


Christine Schmidt reports in Nieman Lab:

Two-thirds of U.S. adults say they get news from social media. 57% say they expect the news on social media to be “largely inaccurate.”70% of Republicans say they expect the news on social media to be inaccurate; 52% of independents and 46% of Democrats feel the same. Convenience, interacting with other people, speed, and timeliness are the top reasons consumers like getting the news from social media. The top-cited reason to dislike news from social: Inaccuracy.
Lots of news on social media? Yep. Lots of accurate news on social media? Nope: That’s the mindset of the typical U.S. news consumer in 2018, according to a new Pew Research Center report on news use on social media platforms.
Around two-thirds of U.S. adults say they get news from social media. (That figure is just about flat compared with 2017.) But 57 percent say they expect the news on social media to be “largely inaccurate.” (Pew interviewed 4,581 U.S. adults.)

Convenience (cited by 21 percent of respondents), interacting with other people, speed, and timeliness are the top reasons that news consumers like getting the news from social media. The top-cited reason to dislike news from social: Inaccuracy.
Silver lining? More respondents said accessing news on social media has helped them (36 percent) than that it has confused them (15 percent).
But there are differences between political parties. Forty-two percent of Democrats say their social media news habits have helped their understanding of current events, compared to 24 percent of Republicans who say the same thing. More than 70 percent of Republicans say they expect the news on social media to be inaccurate; 52 percent of independents and 46 percent of Democrats feel the same.

Despite Facebook’s leaning away from news responsibility, it is still the dominant social media site for Americans to get news, as it was in 2017. Forty percent of respondents said they get news from Facebook, 21 percent from YouTube, and 12 percent from Twitter. (Instagram, LinkedIn, and Snapchat are in the single digits.) But Pew notes a caveat:
Reddit, Twitter and Facebook stand out as the sites where the highest portion of users are exposed to news — 67 percent of Facebook’s users get news there, as do 71 percent of Twitter users and 73 percent of Reddit users. However, because Facebook’s overall user base is much larger than those of Twitter or Reddit, far more Americans overall get news on Facebook than on the other two sites.

But each platform’s user base is different. Pew has a handy reminder chart about “who” is really on Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. (Two bits that stood out to me: Twitter is the network with the best gender parity and Instagram and Snapchat are the only two with majority-minority user bases.)

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

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PercyRempel said...

Many Americans rely on social media for news, yet most expect it to be inaccurate, much like playing wordle game , where guessing can lead to surprises. Despite recognizing this inaccuracy, they appreciate the convenience and speed of social media. This mixed perception reflects how personal beliefs shape their consumption of news, highlighting the need for critical thinking in an era dominated by quick, often unreliable information.

Laura Khulman said...

Many Americans rely on social media for news, despite acknowledging its inaccuracy. While 57% expect misinformation, they appreciate the convenience and speed it offers. This reflects a complex relationship with information, akin to navigating the slope game —balancing risks and rewards. Interestingly, 36% feel social media has improved their news understanding. Ultimately, the challenge remains: how to discern truth in a sea of noise.

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