There was a time when libraries and books were the sole gatekeepers of knowledge. If you wanted to confirm a historical event, settle a debate, or simply satisfy your curiosity, it required deliberate effort – tracking down the right literature and hoping it was still available. Before Google and Wikipedia, people relied on memory and limited texts within reach. For the average person, there was no quick way to find an answer. Today, answers are everywhere yet certainty feels more elusive than ever. Why?Â
Technology and social media have made information more accessible than ever before. Yet, accuracy has become harder to guarantee. With over 6 billion people online according to Statista, anyone can share unverified content instantly. Alarmingly, such unverified information travels faster than the truth itself.
According to a groundbreaking study conducted by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), false information is 70% more likely to be shared and circulates approximately six times quicker than accurate information on social media platforms. This phenomenon is known as misinformation. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) defines misinformation as false information that is shared inadvertently, without meaning to cause harm.
This global challenge is equally evident in Ghana. During the country’s 2024 general elections, false narratives about candidates, electoral integrity, and security spread rapidly across social media, threatening to undermine public trust in the democratic process. Beyond politics, health misinformation has also taken root – from unverified claims about disease outbreaks to dangerous remedies circulated on WhatsApp. A study from Penplusbytes reveals that misinformation in Ghana primarily takes the form of invented content and deceptive headlines that bear no relation to the actual story, with harmful consequences for individuals, businesses, civil society, and government alike.
The dangers of misinformation have not gone unnoticed. Governments, international bodies, and civil society organisations across the world have acknowledged the scale of the problem and are actively working to counter it.
UNESCO has responded with both policy frameworks and public education. On the governance side, the Guidelines for the Governance of Digital Platforms assist governments, regulators, civil society, journalists, and tech firms in managing the dissemination and effects of harmful online content. On the individual level, its Media and Information Literacy programme works to build the critical skills users need to identify misinformation and resist its spread – addressing the problem not just at the top, but at the source.
These international frameworks have echoed in local contexts. In Ghana’s 2024 general elections, a partnership of fact-checking organizations comprising Fact Check Ghana, Dubawa Ghana, and GhanaFact established a media situation room focused on overseeing and disproving misleading narratives that could jeopardize the credibility and peaceful resolution of the elections. The initiative marked a meaningful step toward embedding accountability within Ghana’s information ecosystem.
While governments and international organisations are working hard to curb misinformation, the reality is that accessing and sharing credible information is, at its core, an individual responsibility. This is made harder by a shifting media landscape – the rise of short videos and reels has conditioned people to consume information passively, scrolling past content without pausing to question it.
Yet the tools to verify information have never been more accessible. Verification that once took hours can now be done in minutes. Individuals must therefore make a conscious effort to read beyond headlines, consult multiple sources, and form opinions based on evidence rather than instinct. The responsibility of verifying information should not rest solely with government agencies and international organisations — it must also rest with every consumer of information.
We may not be able to fully control how others spread false information. However, we can control what we consume and what we choose to pass on by reading from credible sources, engaging deeply with issues before forming opinions, and thinking critically before hitting share. These habits, coupled with the efforts of governments and civil society, will bring about a meaningful decline in the spread of misinformation.
Misinformation thrives on speed and carelessness. Truth demands patience, scrutiny and intention. The next time you encounter a headline that shocks you or a story that outrages you -pause, read beyond the headline and check the source. Your habits matter in the fight against misinformation.
Author: Abena Adjei-BaffoeÂ
