NEA NAIA Roundup (5/4/21) Williams Baptist University, Lyon College, & Crowley s Ridge College logos (Source: KAIT) By Region 8 Newsdesk | May 4, 2021 at 8:38 PM CDT - Updated May 4 at 8:40 PM
Lyon advanced but Williams Baptist was eliminated Tuesday at the AMC Baseball Tournament
Lyon 11, Hannibal-LaGrange 1 (AMC Baseball Tournament)
The No. 4-seed Lyon College baseball team opened up American Midwest Tournament play with an 11-1 run-rule victory over No. 8-seed Hannibal-LaGrange on Tuesday afternoon at CarShield Field. With the win, the Scots will play No. 1-seed Columbia College tomorrow morning at 10 a.m.
Lyon (22-21) opened up the game with an early 5-0 lead after scoring a pair of runs in the bottom of the first and three more the next inning.
Misinformation, disinformation and hoaxes: What s the difference? japantoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from japantoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Apr 24, 2021
Editor’s note: The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Today’s piece is by Michael J. O’Brien and Izzat Alsmadi, both of Texas A&M-San Antonio.
(THE CONVERSATION) Sorting through the vast amount of information created and shared online is challenging, even for the experts.
Just talking about this ever-shifting landscape is confusing, with terms like “misinformation,” “disinformation” and “hoax” getting mixed up with buzzwords like “fake news.”
Misinformation is perhaps the most innocent of the terms – it’s misleading information created or shared without the intent to manipulate people. An example would be sharing a rumor that a celebrity died, before finding out it’s false.
We re plagued by misinformation in a dangerous world â a problem with ancient roots woman in black jacket wearing blue sunglasses holding iphone
Sorting through the vast amount of information created and shared online is challenging, even for the experts.
Just talking about this ever-shifting landscape is confusing, with terms like âmisinformation, âdisinformation and âhoax getting mixed up with buzzwords like âfake news.
Misinformation is perhaps the most innocent of the terms â it s misleading information created or shared without the intent to manipulate people. An example would be sharing a rumor that a celebrity died, before finding out it s false.
Disinformation, by contrast, refers to deliberate attempts to confuse or manipulate people with dishonest information. These campaigns, at times orchestrated by groups outside the U.S., such as the Internet Research Agency, a well-known Russian troll factory, can be coordinated a