Desinformacao Podcast 〈95% High-Quality〉
The podcast is typically hosted by one or two journalists or digital investigators with a background in fact-checking. The tone is , urgent but not alarmist . Background music is minimal, used only to signal transitions. Sound design includes audio clips of the original disinformation (e.g., a doctored video’s audio) followed by side-by-side verification sounds — a subtle way to “show” rather than just tell.
Embora muitas vezes usados como sinónimos, e fake news não são a mesma coisa. O termo "desinformação" (disinformation) é preferido pela UNESCO, referindo-se a tentativas deliberadas de confundir ou manipular pessoas através da transmissão de informações desonestas. As notícias falsas ( fake news ) são um dos veículos para tal, mas a desinformação pode assumir formas mais subtis, como a distorção de contexto ou a utilização de informação verdadeira para induzir em erro. desinformacao podcast
Diga-me qual desses recortes você gostaria de aprofundar para enriquecer o seu artigo. Share public link The podcast is typically hosted by one or
A long-form segment on a specific topic (e.g., "The History of Anti-Vax Propaganda" or "Election Interference"). Sound design includes audio clips of the original
Narrativas distorcidas sobre conflitos internacionais, sociedades secretas e conspirações governamentais globais.
Furthermore, public health institutions have recognized the deadly potential of misinformation. In partnership with Embrapa, the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz) produced a special episode of its podcast "Crise Climática e Uma Só Saúde" titled (Disinformation in Times of Crisis). The episode discussed how the World Health Organization classifies disinformation as one of the greatest threats to global health, analyzing real-world impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic to natural disasters like the floods in Rio Grande do Sul.
In Brazil, the term desinformação gained urgency during the 2022 elections and the COVID-19 pandemic. Podcasts like Inteligência Ltda (at times) and smaller right-wing shows amplified false claims about electronic voting machines, hydroxychloroquine, and vaccine microchips. One 2023 study by the University of São Paulo found that 1 in 5 political podcasts sampled contained at least one verifiably false claim per episode, often repeated without challenge.