2017 International Conference on Engineering &Amp; MIS (ICEMIS) 2017
DOI: 10.1109/icemis.2017.8272957
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How to stop spread of misinformation on social media: Facebook plans vs. right-click authenticate approach

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Cited by 27 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Other studies reported that social media is responsible for spreading misinformation [52]. Still other articles specifically investigated one type of social media, such as Twitter [52], Facebook [43], Pinterest [5], WhatApp [5], Instagram [38], as well as video analysis on TikTok (for 100 videos with #covidvaccine, [6]) videos. There are also analysis using data on websites (e.g., Google) and online databases (e.g., Patient online Q&A portal data).…”
Section: Results Of Misinformation and Online Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Other studies reported that social media is responsible for spreading misinformation [52]. Still other articles specifically investigated one type of social media, such as Twitter [52], Facebook [43], Pinterest [5], WhatApp [5], Instagram [38], as well as video analysis on TikTok (for 100 videos with #covidvaccine, [6]) videos. There are also analysis using data on websites (e.g., Google) and online databases (e.g., Patient online Q&A portal data).…”
Section: Results Of Misinformation and Online Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Misinformation has drawing attention from online educators in various fields with heavy discussions in social media and impacts of misinformation [6,43]. Because misinformation online is a relative new field which emerged in recent decade with fastest growth last year in 2020, research on misinformation education is scare and is still developing [30].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other articles specifically investigated one type of social media, such as Twitter [52], Facebook [43], Pinterest [5], WhatApp [5], Instagram [38], as well as video analysis on TikTok (for 100 videos with #covidvaccine, Basch et al, 2021) videos. There are also analysis using data on websites (e.g., Google) and online databases (e.g., Patient online Q&A portal data).…”
Section: Results Of Misinformation and Online Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The team used a walkthrough analysis using BPMN to identify quantitative improvement in delivery speed, including theoretical estimates of the improvements to the service. A comparative approach in the reflective analysis combined with modelling tool such as BPMN is used in Pourghomi et al [25], Safieddine and Nakhoul [30] and Ismail et al [15].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%