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Combating Misinformation: The Evolving Role of Journalism in an Era of Digital Disinformation

Prof. Ravi Prakash Chaudhary Bansi Lal University, Bhiwani, Haryana Prof. Monika Rastogi Head, School of Law Lingayay's Vidyapeeth (Deemed to Be University),Faridabad, Haryana DOI: 10.64127/Shodhpith.2025v1i5009 DOI URL: https://doi.org/10.64127/10.64127/Shodhpith.2025v1i5009
Published Date: 04-09-2025 Issue: Vol. 1 No. 4 (2025): september - October 2025 Published Paper : Download

Abstract- The accelerating spread of digital misinformation poses one of the most significant threats to democratic communication, public trust, and social cohesion in the twenty-first century. As digital platforms restructure how information circulates, journalism faces unprecedented challenges in verifying facts, preserving credibility, and safeguarding the public sphere. This paper examines the evolving role of journalism in combating misinformation by analyzing the intersections of technological disruption, shifting audience behaviours, and changing newsroom practices. Scholars such as Wardle and Derakhshan have emphasized that misinformation ecosystems are shaped by emotional engagement, algorithmic amplification, and fragmented media consumption, making traditional gatekeeping insufficient in a networked communication environment. Parallel research by Tandoc et al. highlights the blurred boundaries between news, opinion, and fabricated content, further complicating journalists’ responsibilities in establishing veracity. Within this landscape, the journalist’s function has expanded from merely reporting facts to actively contextualizing information flows, fostering media literacy, and collaborating with digital verification technologies. Empirical studies on fact-checking initiatives—such as those by Graves and later by Gottfried—suggest that verification mechanisms alone cannot counteract misinformation unless accompanied by participatory communication strategies that rebuild audience trust. The rise of deepfakes and AI-generated content also introduces new epistemic vulnerabilities, demonstrating why computational literacy is becoming pivotal in contemporary journalism. Additionally, investigations by Vosoughi and others underscore that false content spreads faster than factual reporting on social media, pushing journalists to adopt new strategies such as real-time debunking and cross-platform monitoring. This paper argues that combating misinformation requires an integrative approach: strengthening ethical journalism, redesigning newsroom workflows for digital verification, fostering collaborative fact-checking networks, and promoting civic media education. Drawing on contemporary scholarship and case analyses disruption but as an active agent capable of reinforcing democratic resilience in an era of disinformation.

Keywords: misinformation, journalism, digital disinformation, fact-checking, media literacy, algorithmic amplification, public trust.


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