Health misinformation on social media could lead to a ‘sicker UK’, experts warn

Social media is swarming with false and misleading health advice on topics such as vaccines, reproductive health and disease outbreaks, experts have warned. They say the surge of misinformation online as well as from AI tools, not only puts individual lives at risk but will lead to a sicker, less productive, UK population.
The Independent

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Penn experts link political violence to misinformation, polarization after Charlie Kirk shooting

Following the murder of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk, University of Pennsylvania experts spoke to The Daily Pennsylvanian about the role of political violence in American life — both past and present — warning that misinformation and polarization are exacerbating the problem.
The Daily Pennsylvanian

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Popular chatbots amplify misinformation

The rate at which chatbots are spreading false information doubled in the last year, according to a report that NewsGuard shared first for English-speaking readers with Axios. Since NewsGuard's last report in August 2024, AI makers have updated chatbots to respond to more prompts instead of declining to answer, and given them the ability to access the web.
AXIOS

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How RFK Jr.’s misguided science on mRNA vaccines is shaping policy − a vaccine expert examines the false claims

At a Sept. 4, 2025, hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faced heated questions from numerous senators about his vaccine policies, including his stance on COVID-19 vaccines and mRNA vaccine technology generally.
The Conversation

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Dungeons & Dragons and disinformation: How gaming can combat the misinformation age

A quote shared by that old high school friend which isn't quite accurate. A social media post with a photo taken out of context. Misinformation, and disinformation, comes for everybody. Yes, that means you, too. It can be difficult to develop the skills and habits strong enough to fend off the constant flood of bad information these days.
KUOW / National Public Radio Network

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Iceland has mostly avoided misinformation. That may be changing.

For centuries, Iceland has tended to be off the world’s beaten path. It’s an island in the North Atlantic, home today to about 400,000 people. Its language is spoken in large numbers nowhere else. These factors, combined with higher standards of living and education attainment, tend to protect Icelanders from the tide of misinformation that has flooded other countries, including the U.S.
Poynter Institute

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College students are bombarded by misinformation, so this professor taught them fact-checking 101 − here’s what happened

Mike Evans knew something had to change. As the lead instructor for American Government 101 at Georgia State University in 2021, Evans had watched his students over the years show up with fewer facts and more conspiracy theories. They arrive with bold, often misleading beliefs shaped by hours spent each day on TikTok, YouTube and Instagram.
The Conversation

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