Navigating FUD and Fake News in Crypto Journalism

2019-1-26 21:27

In an industry that’s flooded with money, it’s sad to see some crypto media outlets succumb to the perils of so-called fake news, not to mention misinformed readers falling for scams during the ICO craze.

2018 was a controversial year in the crypto media sphere. Disappointingly, it was uncovered that stories people may have read on certain crypto news outlets had been paid for without any “sponsored content” labels.

On the flip side, we’ve seen quality media publications cover the rise and fall of the Initial Coin Offering (ICO) craze, the bull and bear crypto market and heard from global financial regulators about their reserved stance on the industry, as well as the traditional financial world’s perspectives about it.

Media sentiment on cryptocurrencies is ever evolving and often fluctuates with the volatility of the cryptocurrency market. In 2018, media reports on the industry have had its ebbs with enthusiastic coverage of emerging startups promising to revolutionize a particular sector, as well as FUD stories about exchange hacks and funds disappearing from exchanges.

To get to the heart of where the industry is heading in 2019, it’s important to understand how to read past the media headlines. It’s time enthusiasts and newcomers alike become more informed about the leaders and companies that are truly building real projects and shaping discourse in the crypto sphere.

Beware of Speculative Bias Content

The media narrative surrounding the cryptocurrency and blockchain industry has the potential to shape crypto user behavior. Often the media’s narrow focus on price movements can be detrimental to the industry as it incentivises users to treat cryptocurrencies as a way to get rich quickly, rather than used as an everyday currency. So be wary of speculative articles that make predictions on whether the price of bitcoin is about to go up or down. Before reading an article, put it to the test and ask: is this a story about biased market speculation, or is merely recounting facts?

It’s not news that the cryptocurrency market is volatile and unpredictable. There’s also not very many real world and tangible ways to predict where the market is going to go. A story about the price of bitcoin going up in the morning can change in the space of a day or a matter of minutes. For instance, the figures in this story about the price of bitcoin “struggling to stay above US$4000” is already irrelevant today and only really serves to inform interested investors. It has little impact on a new privacy protocol that a privacy coin is going to introduce or a new cryptocurrency wallet feature integration.

2018 has already proven that the market can soar into the green and then dramatically drop by US$18 billion in a matter of three days (October 2018). Yes, it’s a shocking figure, and large figures often capture reader attention. But it should be read in the context of the bigger picture because earlier in the year in May 2018, it was reported that cryptocurrency wealth dropped by US$52 Billion during Blockchain Week.

While these stories are timely and informative, it’s important not to get too caught up in watching the prices of cryptocurrencies go up and down but, rather, look at them in the wider context of the developments that have taken place in the industry. After all, Satoshi’s white paper described Bitcoin as a “Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System”—not an investment vehicle.

Real Use Cases Build Credibility

Once the ICO madness started to simmer down by mid-2018, it gave the media more room to pay attention to the projects that are already building tangible use cases. But 2018 taught us not to just take stories about these use cases at face value, even though they have the power to build credibility. As a former journalist, I was taught to question a story from all angles and ensure I use various sources to verify a fact. This is what I encourage readers to do as well.

In March 2018, it was widely reported that Sierra Leone ran the first blockchain election with the help of the blockchain voting system Agora. However, not long after the story came out, the National Electoral Commission of Sierra Leone put out a statement denying the use of blockchain technology in their national election for their next President. Agora only manually recorded the tallies on a private blockchain.

It turned out reporters were misinformed and credible media publications, like CoinDesk, maintained their journalistic integrity by acknowledging what went wrong with the story. Meanwhile, the point Coindesk made in its explanation article is an important one— “exaggerating [blockchain technology’s] real-world accomplishments can only sow public distrust and set the industry back.”

Several months later in November 2018, Thailand’s Opposition Party actually held a blockchain vote for its primary election. The story covering how more than 120,000 votes were cast using the Thai-developed Zcoin blockchain during the 1-9 November vote made the front page of Thailand’s Broadsheet English-language daily newspaper, The Nation. This front page story was significant recognition of blockchain technology and its ability to transform national voting systems in the future.

When reading future stories about blockchain technology use cases, ensure credible sources are cited before taking a story as a fact—whether it be a national body, a real user, or the blockchain itself. It’s time to forget about who is the “first” to an achievement and instead pay attention to what was achieved and how.

Go-to Sources that Measure the Pulse of the Industry

Readers have a number of options on where to get their information about blockchain and cryptocurrencies. While there are several credible news sources to choose from, there were also plenty of not-so-credible sources— especially in the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry with questionable journalistic ethics.

Let’s look at some trustworthy resources you can rely on moving into 2019. You can expect niche publications such as CoinDesk, CCN, CryptoSlate, CryptoBriefing, and Coin Journal to continue to cover stories that measure the pulse of the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry. Readers of these publications are also more crypto literate and therefore can expect the articles to be more technical and in depth.

To see where the cryptocurrency industry fits in the technology sphere, publications like TechCrunch, Quartz, The Next Web and Fortune do a good job at covering the industry.

And to check what the traditional finance and crypto-finance worlds have to say about the cryptocurrency and blockchain sphere, mainstream top-tier finance and business outlets like Bloomberg and CNBC are growing their crypto reporting sections. Additionally, the Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal cover developments in the industry. It’s encouraging to see these newsrooms dedicating resources to covering this beat. Of course, to hear from the cryptocurrency leaders and developers themselves, Medium, Hacked and Crypto Twitter is the place to go.

We often need to take a step back and remember that the crypto industry is still very young and not very many people understand it yet. In 2019, I believe we’ll see mainstream news publications like the Guardian or the BBC continue to touch on this emerging industry.

Explainer Pieces Set the Tone

Do not underestimate the power of explainer pieces and educational articles about this emerging technology to inform and shape the mainstream public’s perceptions of this industry.

When global, top tier media publications like the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times started to put out explainers about ICOs, the mainstream public started to learn about the technology and take it more seriously. This year we started to see explainer pieces about Security Token Offerings (STOs) emerge.

Moving into 2019, it’s time media publications do away with overused buzzwords like “decentralisation” and “distributed ledger” when explaining how blockchain technology works or what cryptocurrencies are. Rather, it’s time to look at how they can break down the often technical and complex aspects from different angles with case studies and improved illustrations. It’s time for different examples and analogies.

Improved Media Crypto Literacy in 2019

Media coverage of cryptocurrency in 2019 is going to be more in depth and have better quality than in previous years. For starters, audiences are more informed about blockchain and cryptocurrencies than ever before. It’s important that moving forward, quality media cryptocurrency publications start to correct misinformation and better explain the technology and the communities at play.

At the same time, to ensure that mainstream readers are able to understand and keep up with media developments, it’s important for journalist and editors to go back and explain the significant pivotal points in the history of bitcoin and development of cryptocurrencies.

To the audience, remember to question everything you read. View every story with a critical eye. If the sources don’t add up, do your own further research before you invest more time, energy, and money into a project.

The post Navigating FUD and Fake News in Crypto Journalism appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Similar to Notcoin - TapSwap on Solana Airdrops In 2024

origin »

Emerald Crypto (EMD) íà Currencies.ru

$ 0.0095806 (+7.58%)
Îáúåì 24H $0
Èçìåíåèÿ 24h: 2.35 %, 7d: -7.78 %
Cåãîäíÿ L: $0.0086651 - H: $0.0095806
Êàïèòàëèçàöèÿ $183.154k Rank 1690
Öåíà â ÷àñ íîâîñòè $ 0.0033227 (188.34%)

crypto fake media fud navigating journalism stories

crypto fake → Ðåçóëüòàòîâ: 126


Ôîòî:

Top Officials at Two Korean Cryptocurrency Exchanges Face Fraud Indictments

Several of South Korea’s top crypto exchanges have found themselves in hot water, with executives at a couple of exchanges facing criminal charges and jail time. According to a news report on the Korean website Blockinpress, the CEO of Komid, a Korean crypto exchange, has received a three-year prison sentence for committing fraud against investors by artificially inflating the exchange’s actual trading volume.

2019-1-23 00:57


Founder Charlie Lee Warns Users About Fake Litecoin Telegram Groups Scamming People

During the last year, several scams affected crypto users. Even after a whole year and several warnings, these scammers continue to operate. This time, Charlie Lee, the founder of the popular digital asset Litecoin (LTC), informed that there are several fake Litecoin groups that are scamming people. In general, the most used social media platform […]

2019-1-16 07:38


Cryptojacking Threat: Malware Movie Torrents Steals Crypto And Inserts Fake Wikipedia Donation Banners

Breaking: Torrent Malware That Phishes Crypto Currently Doing The Rounds Online It has recently come to light that a new strain of malware that is currently circulating across a host of different Torrent websites is infecting the machines of crypto owners that make use of the Windows OS. To be even more specific, the malware […]

2019-1-15 18:45


Swedish Reserve Bank Riksbank Warns Users of Crypto Scammers Selling Fake ‘e-Krona’

While Sweden has gained a reputation as a remarkably progressive country with regards to embracing technology, there are some things that don't change – scams. According to the country's reserve bank, a warning has been sent out to the public to be vigilant around companies and/or individuals that are reportedly selling the electronic version of […]

2019-1-10 04:33


Crypto News Recap for Dec 6th – BTC Scammers, Cryptojacking, SWIFT Launch, SEC Peirce on ETF and More [VIDEO]

Bitcoin Scammers Dupe Singapore Crypto Investors With Fake Investment Opportunities Bitcoin Scammers Dupe Singapore Crypto Investors With Fake Investment Opportunities Blackmoon Blockchain Firm Launches Binance ETx Token Based On Binance's Most-Traded Coins Blackmoon Blockchain Firm Launches Binance ETx Token Based On Binance's Most-Traded Coins A.

2018-12-6 23:16


Crypto Media Outlets Report Naked Technology ICO Scammers Receive Arrest Warrant

During 2017 and the beginning of 2018, new Initial Coin Offerings entered the market and started offering tokens to investors. Nevertheless, as the market was growing at very fast rates, new scammers tried to steal users funds and investors’ money creating fraudulent or fake Initial Coin Offerings (ICO). In most of the cases where scammers […]

2018-12-6 15:58


Bitcoin Scams: Singaporeans Losing Thousands of Dollars to Crypto Fraudsters

Singapore authorities recent report that residents have lost about $78,000 to fraudulent online platforms in three months. Online Cryptocurrency Scam Using Fake Personalities The Straits Times reports that Singapore residents have fallen victim to some online Bitcoin scams in a couple of months, losing up to $78,000 between September and November 2018.

2018-12-6 11:44


Recent ‘Satoshi’ Tweet From Infamous Bitcoin Inventor Deemed Fake By BTC Developer Jimmy Song

One of the recent causes of conversation lately in the crypto industry after a tweet from pseudonymous Bitcoin inventor Satoshi Nakamoto was posted online. Thought to be authentic, both sides of the Bitcoin Cash split were discussing it, even though it quickly was erased from Twitter, along with the whole account. The original text said, […]

2018-11-26 16:23


Target and Google Official Twitter Accounts Hacked, Used for Crypto Scams

In what is becoming an emerging trend, Twitter accounts of popular brands are being hacked in an attempt to scam unsuspecting users out of their cryptocurrencies. Target and Google are two high profile targets that have seen their accounts taken over by hackers who, in turn, have used them to scam followers by advertising fraudulent crypto giveaways.

2018-11-15 23:40