WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - False news stories spread much more quickly and widely on
Twitter <TWTR.N> than truthful ones, an imbalance driven more by
people than automated "bot" accounts, researchers said on Thursday.
A
study by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's
Media Lab examining about 126,000 stories shared by some 3 million
people on Twitter from 2006 to 2017 found that false news was about 70
percent more likely to be retweeted by people than true news.
The
study, published in the journal Science, was one of the most
comprehensive efforts to date to assess the dynamics behind how false
news circulates on social media.
Source: YahooNews
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