President Joe Biden had conspiracy theorists in a tizzy after posting what appeared to be his reaction to the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl win on Sunday night.

“Just like we drew it up,” Biden posted on X alongside a photo of “Dark Brandon,” the meme created by hardcore—and very online—supporters of Donald Trump that Biden and his team loved so much they adopted it as their own.

The post was apparently referencing far-right conspiracy theories which posit the NFL and high-level government operatives conspired to rig the Super Bowl in Kansas City’s favor to give maximum exposure to a yet-to-be-announced endorsement from Chiefs star Travis Kelce and his girlfriend Taylor Swift.

  • @Shanedino
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    1410 months ago

    The problem is that there is too much information. And information doesn’t come with a disclaimer of whether it’s fact, opinion, conspiracy, or otherwise batshit.

    • @drivepiler
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      1710 months ago

      We have passed the age of information, we have entered the age of misinformation.

      • oce 🐆
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        10 months ago

        Or went back to it? I think there was only a short period of time in human’s existence when only the intellectual elite could reach the public with the new technologies because it was too complicated or pricey for the common people. Now we’re back to bar-room level of information quality.

        • Cosmic Cleric
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          10 months ago

          Or went back to it?

          Now we’re back to bar-room level of information quality.

          /disagree

          There used to be something called The Fourth Estate (of Government). Used to be.

          • oce 🐆
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            210 months ago

            Was that press accessible for the average people at that time? Everybody being able to read is fairly recent too.

    • Cosmic Cleric
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      410 months ago

      News organzations should not be allowed to express opinions, but only recite news.

    • RedFox
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      210 months ago

      Did people think more critically before? Or maybe there was limited dissemination in the past? Crazy BS maybe didn’t travel as far?

      I’d like to think we could differentiate between fact, opinion, and BS more in the past, but that’s probably not true.

      • @[email protected]
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        410 months ago

        I think learning everything about the world from the random unqualified people around you is exactly how most people in history have done it. As long as it’s a person you like and they say it with confidence, it will probably stick.

        But now it is easier to see that process happening and avoid it. It’s also easier to locate authoritative sources of information.

        Except… even though this works for many of us, it paradoxically makes the problem WORSE for a huge number of people. We have easier access to all the opinions out there, but that means any given shitty opinion has the potential to reach millions rather than somebody’s social circle.

        • RedFox
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          210 months ago

          I agree. What I have no idea about these days is how to solve this.

          It might be a ‘there is no solution’ type problem, but it would be nice if more people and organizations as a whole recognized this issue.

          Maybe publishing questionable information over a long period of time or our lack of holding orgs and individuals accountable contributed. I’d think it hard to legislate accountability without reducing freedom or speech, press, and opinion (that isn’t toxic, but that’s subjective and part of the problem isn’t it).