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posted by mrpg on Wednesday March 13 2019, @12:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the ok dept.

'Momo' may be 'dead,' but experts say avoiding the next hoax is up to us

[...] So how did we get here? How did this apparent hoax, now just the latest fodder for internet memes, wind up causing panic among parents in countries from India to Colombia, from the UK to the United States, and from the Houses of Parliament to U.S. police agencies?

[...] Laura Hazard Owen, deputy editor of Harvard's Nieman Journalism Lab, called the "Momo challenge" phenomenon "the most fascinating/unique fake news story I've covered in awhile." The problem, she said, was that most of the news stories warning people about "Momo" appeared to be based on hearsay. One local news station, she pointed out, "simply interviewed a 5-year-old," while others ran with anecdotes from parents who had heard from their child that they had heard from another child... you get the point.

[...] "Unless you can watch all media, TV and news, consciously, step back from it, get a little distance and ask yourself what's being said, you're going to be taken in," Dr. Mramor argued. "It's like when you're watching a scary movie and get sucked into the plot... be a conscious consumer," she said. "And if more people were, this would never have happened. We wouldn't even be talking about this story."


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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 13 2019, @11:35PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 13 2019, @11:35PM (#813974)

    The next generation of helicopter mommies will find a dozen other scary non-existent things over which to have hysterical fears.

    In my (definitely pre-helicopter) time, the scary rumor was that drug fiends were putting LSD on sticker sheets. Rationally, I don't know how parents would have thought their 6 year old could then afford an LSD habit once addicted (if that were even possible), but someone randomly wanting to cause harm to their kid would have been the backstop justification.

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