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Using Fact-Checking Tools

Next, watch this video:

Sometimes a single search can Break the Fake if a professional fact-checker has already done the work for you.

You can use a specific fact-checker website, or our custom search engine: https://mediasmarts.ca/fact-checker

It’s a custom search engine that lets you search several fact-checkers at once, including: Snopes.com, Agence France Presse Canada, FactCheck.org, Politifact, Washington Post Fact Checker, Associated Press Fact Check, HoaxEye and Les Decrypteurs.

If you want to use a different fact-checker, make sure it’s signed on to the International Fact-Checking Network’s code of principles (see https://ifcncodeofprinciples.poynter.org/signatories).

Some of those principles are:

 

  • A commitment to non-partisanship (not favoring any group or political party) and fairness
  • A commitment to standards and transparency of sources (showing the evidence behind a judgment)
  • A commitment to transparency of funding and organization (where their money comes from)
  • A commitment to open and honest corrections policy (posting corrections quickly and clearly when thy make a mistake

To look at a broader range of sources, do a search for the story with the word “hoax” or “fake” added.

Because anyone can call themselves a fact-checker, you need to double-check if your search leads to sources you don’t already know are reliable. Find the Source for more info.

Remember that just because a fact-checker hasn’t debunked something doesn’t mean it’s true. It can take a while for fact-checkers to verify a story, and not every one will verify every story.

If no reliable fact-checkers has covered it yet, move on to other steps like Find the source or Check other sources.

 

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Navigating Digital Media Literacy - Student Textbook Copyright © by MediaSmarts. All Rights Reserved.

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