Abstract
Drawing on a semi-systematic review and a qualitative analysis of posts on Facebook and
Instagram between November 2023 and March 2025, the article identifies several subtle
practices through which news outlets mislead audiences, even when they can reasonably
anticipate that these strategies will confuse typical users: (1) digitally manipulated images
that fabricate or exaggerate threats; (2) authentic but decontextualised photographs that
invite false associations; (3) emotional clickbait pairings of headlines and visuals in which
corrective information is relegated to lengthy captions; and (4) ambiguous or omissive
headlines that rely on pragmatic implicatures rather than explicit falsehoods. The analysis
shows that journalistic disinformation on social media is often produced through editorial
choices aligned with platform logics of visibility and engagement. Understanding these
practices is key to rethinking media accountability in digital environments where most users
engage only with headlines, thumbnails and brief snippets, rather than with full articles.
| Lingua originale | Inglese |
|---|---|
| pagine (da-a) | 105-122 |
| Numero di pagine | 18 |
| Rivista | ANÀLISI |
| Volume | 73 |
| DOI | |
| Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2025 |
Keywords
- disinformation
- misinformation
- journalism
- social media
- visual communica- tion
- clickbait
- editorial practices