(Apple's Best of 2018) In-depth conversations with people at the top of their game. Jordan Harbinger unpacks guests' wisdom into practical nuggets you can use to impact your work, life, and relationships. Learn from leaders (Ray Dalio, Simon Sinek, Mark Cuban), entertainers (Moby, Tip "T.I." Harris, Dennis Quaid), scientists (Neil deGrasse Tyson, Bill Nye), athletes (Kobe Bryant, Dennis Rodman, Tony Hawk) and an eclectic array of fascinating minds, from art forgers and arms traffickers to sp ...
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69: Detecting Misinformation with Steve Rathje
Manage episode 377117060 series 1425308
Content provided by NJJOHNSON and Nicholas J. Johnson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by NJJOHNSON and Nicholas J. Johnson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
PATREON
MY STUFF
STEVE'S WEBSITE
STEVE'S TIKTOK
I’ve been sick for the past few months. Which is why there has been an episode of a Scamapalooza in a little while.
Instead, I’ve been spending a lot of time in bed feeling sorry for myself while trawling tiktok.
Among the craft videos, slime reviews and video game analysis, I came across a video of a young academic making iced coffee while explaining his research into why some people detect misinformation on social media while others let it slide.
Is it an education issue? A psychological block? Or do people just lack the proper motivation?
On this episode of Scamapalooza, I talk to Steven Rathje about his research into fake news, his one point one million followers, and how to fix the problem of truth on social media.
He also gives me genuinely useful ideas on the types of TikTok content my followers would want to see.
MY STUFF
STEVE'S WEBSITE
STEVE'S TIKTOK
I’ve been sick for the past few months. Which is why there has been an episode of a Scamapalooza in a little while.
Instead, I’ve been spending a lot of time in bed feeling sorry for myself while trawling tiktok.
Among the craft videos, slime reviews and video game analysis, I came across a video of a young academic making iced coffee while explaining his research into why some people detect misinformation on social media while others let it slide.
Is it an education issue? A psychological block? Or do people just lack the proper motivation?
On this episode of Scamapalooza, I talk to Steven Rathje about his research into fake news, his one point one million followers, and how to fix the problem of truth on social media.
He also gives me genuinely useful ideas on the types of TikTok content my followers would want to see.
70 episodes
Manage episode 377117060 series 1425308
Content provided by NJJOHNSON and Nicholas J. Johnson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by NJJOHNSON and Nicholas J. Johnson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
PATREON
MY STUFF
STEVE'S WEBSITE
STEVE'S TIKTOK
I’ve been sick for the past few months. Which is why there has been an episode of a Scamapalooza in a little while.
Instead, I’ve been spending a lot of time in bed feeling sorry for myself while trawling tiktok.
Among the craft videos, slime reviews and video game analysis, I came across a video of a young academic making iced coffee while explaining his research into why some people detect misinformation on social media while others let it slide.
Is it an education issue? A psychological block? Or do people just lack the proper motivation?
On this episode of Scamapalooza, I talk to Steven Rathje about his research into fake news, his one point one million followers, and how to fix the problem of truth on social media.
He also gives me genuinely useful ideas on the types of TikTok content my followers would want to see.
MY STUFF
STEVE'S WEBSITE
STEVE'S TIKTOK
I’ve been sick for the past few months. Which is why there has been an episode of a Scamapalooza in a little while.
Instead, I’ve been spending a lot of time in bed feeling sorry for myself while trawling tiktok.
Among the craft videos, slime reviews and video game analysis, I came across a video of a young academic making iced coffee while explaining his research into why some people detect misinformation on social media while others let it slide.
Is it an education issue? A psychological block? Or do people just lack the proper motivation?
On this episode of Scamapalooza, I talk to Steven Rathje about his research into fake news, his one point one million followers, and how to fix the problem of truth on social media.
He also gives me genuinely useful ideas on the types of TikTok content my followers would want to see.
70 episodes
All episodes
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