Misinformation

Nearly 38% of English-language news articles containing Covid-19 misinformation mentioned President Donald Trump, Cornell University researchers found.
The president’s team has shared at least three deceptive images or videos on social media in the past 10 days.
Networks failed to remove 95% of anti-vaccine misinformation reported, campaign says.
Some deride deplatforming as a sign of an emerging “cancel culture” and an attack on free speech. But inaction is dangerous too, Imran Ahmed writes.
Facebook and Twitter both penalised the president's campaign for posting videos.
Creating a vaccine is one thing. Getting people to embrace it is another.
The House speaker called on scientists to "speak up" against the president's falsehoods in an interview with "The Late Late Show" host James Corden.
Panic about coronavirus doesn’t serve anyone – especially not kids.
A viral post is spreading misinformation about stopping Covid-19, experts tell HuffPost UK.
Wellness culture is capitalising on Covid-19. Here's what's a myth and what actually keeps you healthy.