Is truth making a comeback? It is now 20 years since social media platforms first started warping our reality. But some experts see light at the end of the tunnel in 2023.
Crystal ball: fake news gets (really) boring
Is truth making a comeback? It is now 20 years since social media platforms first started warping our reality. But some experts see light at the end of the tunnel in 2023.
What proportion of children in MoldovaAn Eastern European country with a population of 2.5 million. It is a former Soviet republic. aged seven to 11 do you think are in education? And what percentage of South Koreans believe climate breakdown is a major threat to their country?
Around three-quarters of people get the answers to these questions wrong. Although 90% of Moldovan children are still in school, most people believe it must be more like 40 or 60%.
And although South Koreans are very aware of the dangers of climate breakdown, with 80% agreeing it is a major threat, most of us expect the figure to be only 30 to 55%.
These figures come from a new website, called Gapminder, that is revealing just how little we know about the world.
This means we do not recognise how much progress we have made on issues like climate breakdown, and that we underestimate how much better things have got.
What is responsible for this obliviousnessLack of awareness or knowledge.? Many point the figure at social media. They say it has flooded our minds with untruths, and taken away the tools we need to understand the world.
Psychologists warn that social media also stops us from doing "deep reading", a kind of reading in which we are completely focused on the text in front of us. Only 25% of children say they do this kind of reading daily or nearly daily.1 This makes it harder for us to learn.
There is still hope, however. Some think the tide is turning.
Social media companies are in crisis. For the first time, we might be looking at a future without social media.
Some believe there is a deeper reason for this. The storm of lies and exaggerations that rages constantly on social media is simply quite boring.
So 2023 might, they say, be the year that we finally throw off the shacklesThe metal links used to connect prisoners to chains. of Big Tech and start learning about the world again.
<h5 class=" eplus-wrapper" id="question"><strong>Is truth making a comeback?</strong></h5>
Yes: Constant outrage and lying are just plain boring. We are all fed up with the high-sugar diet of short texts and videos: we are ready to start reading healthily again.
No: Like sugar, social media is addictive. It does not matter that we do not really enjoy using it: we keep coming back because it has become a compulsionSomething you feel like you have to do. .
Or... The problem is not just social media: it is our pace of life in general. Modern life is freneticFast, frantic and uncontrolled. , uncertain, and full of anxiety. We use social media like a drug, as a way of escaping from this anxiety for even a few hours.
Moldova - An Eastern European country with a population of 2.5 million. It is a former Soviet republic.
Obliviousness - Lack of awareness or knowledge.
Shackles - The metal links used to connect prisoners to chains.
Compulsion - Something you feel like you have to do.
Frenetic - Fast, frantic and uncontrolled.
Crystal ball: fake news gets (really) boring
![](https://theday.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/2023-01-04_homo-stupidis1.jpg)
Glossary
Moldova - An Eastern European country with a population of 2.5 million. It is a former Soviet republic.
Obliviousness - Lack of awareness or knowledge.
Shackles - The metal links used to connect prisoners to chains.
Compulsion - Something you feel like you have to do.
Frenetic - Fast, frantic and uncontrolled.