The Speed At Which Wrong Information Flows

from the unfortunate dept

If you've been following the news of the protests in Iran over the past few days, you've no doubt heard about the story of Neda Soltani, who was shot and killed on video, and has become, as some news reports have noted, "the face of Iran's struggle." Not to get into the politics of it all, what is quite fascinating is the news that the photo that many individuals and news sources are using for Soltani isn't just of a different Neda Soltani, but it's due to confusion over how Facebook works (found via Mathew Ingram).

Basically, a woman named Amy Beam, who was interested in the Neda Soltani in the video contacted other Neda Soltani's found on Facebook, and one communicated back with her, and eventually they "friended" each other on Facebook. Soon after, the "living" Neda Soltani posted a translation of an article about the killed Neda Soltani on Amy's Facebook "wall." However, the way this works, is that along with the post on the wall, it includes the poster's own avatar/profile photo -- in this case the living Neda Soltani. From that, others who were friends of Amy saw the name Neda Soltani, the story about the killed woman, and the photo of the living woman -- and assumed they were all the same woman... and from there the photo started spreading like wildfire, including websites, TV, banners and elsewhere. And the really scary part is that the living Neda Soltani is now quite afraid for her life, since she's suddenly become "the face of the face of the struggle in Iran" despite not being the woman who was shot.

Certainly, bad information flows at incredible speed in this day and age, but the series of events and confusion that led to this result is quite fascinating, if a bit scary (especially for the living Neda Soltani). There's an effort under way to alert everyone using the wrong photo to change their images, but you have to wonder how effective that will be.
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Filed Under: bad information, iran, neda soltani, photos, protests
Companies: facebook


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  • icon
    another mike (profile), 23 Jun 2009 @ 12:16pm

    fact-checkers'r'not-us

    It would be the job of the newspapers' fact checker to make sure they were using the right picture. Unfortunately they were all fired years ago.
    Can you remind me again why we need to keep them in business?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Chronno S. Trigger (profile), 23 Jun 2009 @ 1:47pm

      Re: fact-checkers'r'not-us

      Oddly enough, there was a guy at Sheetz today giving out free newspapers trying to sell subscriptions. That was one of the arguments that he used: newspapers are more accurate than online. I laughed my ass off for hours. He also used the arguments: online is stealing our reports (kinda eliminates the accuracy argument), and hundreds of thousands of jobs are lost. I'll probably still be laughing about that tomorrow (the supposedly caused by the Internet part, not the job loss part).

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Dark Helmet (profile), 23 Jun 2009 @ 1:12pm

    Added to the list

    FYI, my novel-sized list entitled "Reasons to avoid having your picture on the internet" has been amended to include:

    Reason #33,956 -- So as not to become the unwitting rallying cry of a revolution I didn't participate in

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Maybe pictures can steal your soul, 23 Jun 2009 @ 4:00pm

      Re: Added to the list

      Awesome comment. I want to see the rest of the list.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 23 Jun 2009 @ 1:27pm

    The Speed At Which Wrong Information Flows

    Is exactly 1,000,000 times the speed and distance of the correct information.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    chiklitz, 23 Jun 2009 @ 1:41pm

    The Speed At Which Wrong Information Flows

    just because someone chooses to blog that they "know" the living Neda and thats her in the pic (and not the poor woman killed) doesnt mean its true. people can blog anything they damn well please.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      chiklitz, 23 Jun 2009 @ 2:00pm

      Re: The Speed At Which Wrong Information Flows

      my brother just made a good point: dont you think that her fiance would have said something about it being the wrong pic when he was interviewed??

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        H, 23 Jun 2009 @ 2:36pm

        Re: Re: The Speed At Which Wrong Information Flows

        What part are you refering to? I dont see anything about a fiance being interviewed?
        :-/

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    fogbugzd, 23 Jun 2009 @ 2:02pm

    Convenient information flows faster than inconvenient

    Information that is "convenient" flows much faster than inconvenient information. Convenient information is anything that tends to support your world view and/or financial interests. Inconvenient information doesn't support these biases.

    Everyone is quite eager to embrace convenient information, and therefore it flows quickly. They will repost it, tell their friends, and remember it for later reference. In the process any bits of inconvenient information that may be part of the story tend to get trimmed away or minimized.

    Inaccurate information tends to be more convenient than accurate information. The real world rarely supports our preconceived notions 100%, so accurate data almost always comes with at least a little bit of inconvenience that must be trimmed away. This is why we see misinformation travel much faster than conventient information in most cases.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      H, 23 Jun 2009 @ 2:41pm

      Re: Convenient information flows faster than inconvenient

      Sad but true!
      Its all just a click away.
      Random posts on social networking websites, blogs are seen as such credible sources!
      of course to top all of this we have the wonderful media - adding to it all, feeding into peoples misconceptions and whatnot.


      sigh.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous12, 23 Jun 2009 @ 3:22pm

    At least one news organization, FOX News ("Get your Red Meat Here" patent pending) had a different picture up today, and it appeared to be different from the previous picture, so it looks like the blogger is correct. Also I don't think the deceased woman's fiance would notice the image used online for a story right away.
    He wouldn't be told about it unless he asked. An interview doesn't take place during the editing stage. Duh!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 23 Jun 2009 @ 3:46pm

    The Speed At Which Wrong Information Flows = The speed the Mike Masnick can type.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    R. Miles (profile), 24 Jun 2009 @ 3:53am

    Wait...

    Are you saying NEWSPAPERS are using a copyright image they didn't pay for in order to sell copyright content which they'll sue over if used incorrectly?

    I sit speechless.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Stephen Pate, 24 Jun 2009 @ 8:43am

    Neda Agha Soltan

    You might check your spelling. Although a few sources have spelled her name "Soltani" - most sources list it as "Soltan" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neda_(Iranian_protester) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ne da_Agha-Soltan http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Neda_Agha-Soltan

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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