• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Steve Vogel | Author of The New York Times Best-Selling book Reasonable Doubt

Steve Vogel | Author of The New York Times Best-Selling book Reasonable Doubt

The official website of New York Times Best-Selling Author Steve Vogel

  • Home
  • About Steve
  • Books by Steve
    • Broadcast Live
    • Reasonable Doubt
    • The Unforgiven
  • Contact Steve

Learning from fact-checkers

August 14, 2018

Katy Steinmetz writes one of the better articles I’ve seen about the challenges we all face in deciding what to believe on the Internet.  Her article, “The Real Fake News Crisis,” is in the current (Aug. 20, 2018) issue of Time magazine. If you’re among those concerned about the effect wide-spread untruths can have on the democratic process and believe we don’t want the government in charge of deciding what can or can’t be on the Internet, it’s worth the read.

There are useful insights about how professional fact-checkers detect misinformation on the web and thoughts about how our schools need to “train students to be skeptical without making them cynical.”

“Having a well-informed citizenry,” she writes, “may be, in the big picture, as important to survival as having clean air and water.”

I hope this link will work for you: http://time.com/author/katy-steinmetz/

Filed in: Steve Vogel's Clippings
Previous Post:Hendricks’s early hours, days behind bars
Next Post:The Hendricks letters

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Contact Steve
Read moreReasonable Doubt: True Crime Classic
Read moreThe Unforgiven
Read moreBroadcast Live
Read moreAbout Steve Vogel

Copyright © 2025 · Steve Vogel | Author of The New York Times Best-Selling book Reasonable Doubt · All Rights Reserved