Do you remember the story of a Serb who was killed by a shark on holiday in Sharm el-Sheikh? Domestic and some foreign media certainly will never forget because it was a satirical story behind which stands Njuz.net, and by 2010, and published many public service media as well as the Russian Pravda.
Do you remember the story of a Serb who was killed by a shark on holiday in Sharm el-Sheikh? Domestic and some foreign media certainly will never forget because it was a satirical story behind which stands Njuz.net, wot efficiency and by 2010, and published many public service media as well as the Russian Pravda. A similar trend for years has been present in the West, and to separate the satirical articles from the real news, from Facebook are sounded to test the introduction of special tags to denote such content.
As reported by Ars Technica, the new system Tagging is intended precisely to those users of Facebook who have so far burned several times and believed the false story. The Onion is the first site that received the experimental tags [Satire], and if it proves useful, the new option could make their way to find and to domestic satirical portals such as Njuz.net and News-bar. End of 'hardcore' satire?
From Facebook responded with pointing out that they had received a large number of complaints by users who want a clearer picture of the current state of the world's information. In an interview with Ars Technica, Facebook representative said:
At present we conduct a test on a small group of users thingy will appear label [Satire] in front of the articles published by The Onion, which appear in their News Feed-in. This experiment implements because we received criticism from a large number of users who want a clearer picture of the information.
Although chances are that the new system Tagging comes to life in the near future, it may take still some time before more clearly separated from the true satirical content on social networks. What we are left until then is to enjoy the best reactions thousands of users of social networks, which from day to day fall for some of the best examples of inverted news.
Mark is the editor of Drupal for Serbia. Joining the team in 2012, soon emerged as one of the leading IT journalists in Serbia covering topics on Internet entrepreneurship, new technologies and digital trends. Passionate towards new media and publishing in the 21st century, Mark reports from Belgrade, mentorirajući in leisure startups on the topic of media presence and public relations.
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