New Delhi:As many as 54 percent of people in India turn to social media when looking for factual information, according to a global study by Oxford University Press (OUP). The research-led campaign 'The Matter of Fact' looked at the level of understanding of how truths are identified and sources validated.
Despite concerns around misinformation and false claims, social media users around the world continue to believe that the information they read and share on platforms like Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook is factually correct, with levels of trust highest in emerging economies, the study said.
The findings show that when looking for factual information, 37 percent turn to social media, rising to 43 percent of Mexicans and South Africans and 54 percent of Indians. Britons were less likely to look for facts using social media, with only 16 percent describing it as a preferred source, compared to nearly three in 10 (29 percent) Americans.
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Overall, most of us rely heavily on Google and other search engines for information, with two thirds (67 percent) worldwide and 62 percent in the UK finding facts this way. Three-quarters of people are confident information they share from social media is accurate. In India, as many as 87 percent of people who share information from social media are confident in its truthfulness, slightly above the global average of three quarters, it said.
The study takes a broad look at how people across the world seek out information and judge its accuracy, drawing on a pool of evidence bolstered by survey data collected from 5,000 people across the UK, the US, South Africa, India, and Mexico. It found that more than half (52 percent) said that when it came to distinguishing fact from fiction, sites like Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram play an important role.
At the same time, reliance on books and more traditional means of gathering accurate information has declined. For example, less than a third cited non-fiction books and encyclopedias as sources when seeking facts. There were geographical differences in the level of trust people put in social media, with almost 80 percent of Indian and 60 percent of Mexican respondents seeing these networks as an important tool for separating fact from fiction, but only 27 percent taking this view in the UK and 42 percent in the US, the study said.