The Integrity Project

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Quantifying the 'Infodemic:' People increasingly turned to trustworthy news outlets during the 2020 coronavirus pandemic

Sacha Altayrasmus, Kleis Nielsen, Richard Fletcher
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, Oxford University

INTRODUCTION

How did the 2020 coronavirus pandemic affect people’s online news consumption? To understand this, we present a comparative analysis of data on an estimated 9,058 desktop and mobile visits to news outlets, and 548 Facebook engagements, generated by news outlets in the US, UK, France, and Germany between 2017 and 2021. We find that in 2020 online news consumption increased. Trustworthy news outlets benefited the most from the increase in web traffic. In the UK trustworthy news outlets also benefited the most from the increase in Facebook engagement, but in other countries both trustworthy and untrustworthy news outlets benefited from the increase in Facebook engagement. Overall, untrustworthy news outlets (as rated by NewsGuard) captured 2.3% of web traffic and 14.0% of Facebook engagement, while news outlets regularly publishing false content accounted for 1.4% of web traffic and 6.8% of Facebook engagement. People largely turned to trustworthy news outlets during the 2020 coronavirus pandemic. READ THE FULL REPORT