Post
by owlice » Mon Jul 05, 2010 8:32 pm
Oh, Chris, I don't know about that. I think people -- some people, anyway, more and more of them, are learning. I used to get a lot of emails from friends and acquaintances about all sorts of things that just weren't true. By replying with a few sentences and a link to the relevant page of Snopes, most of these folks are more skeptical now, and more willing to check out the claims they read in forwarded emails. I get far fewer of these emails now; of course, that could me that some people have deleted me from their mailing lists because my responses have been unsatisfactory to them! <g> But I think it more likely they have learned to be skeptical.
The forwarded emails-of-eyebrow-raising-claims I still get -- I do still get a few, but they are rare -- now typically carry a disclaimer along the lines of "I have not checked this out and don't know whether it's true but I'm forwarding it anyway just in case it is!" Those, I hit "Reply to all" instead of just "Reply," to try to head off more forwarding.
Years ago, my first husband got a scarygram from someone in security at his workplace, which had gone out to quite a few employees to my understanding, and forwarded it to me; I had read it before (in a book about urban legends), pulled the link for the Snopes article, and sent that right back to him. First husband wrote to the guy who'd sent out the email asking what his source was, there was back-and-forth, involvement of higher-ups, general mayhem and brou-ha-ha, and embarrassing retraction of scarygram by management.
First husband is one of the smartest people I know, but this particular email hit an emotional hot button for him, and he reacted to that, though the email's source -- from someone considered credible -- lent credence to the message, too.*
People are learning! Takes time. There is a lot of dumb stuff out there and the internet helps spread it around, but the internet, in the hands of those who know to ask, can counter at least some of the dumb stuff.
* I've been known to swallow an urban legend or two and repeat it, too, as true; please don't think I'm picked on the exH here! I certainly had to learn my lessons the hard way!
A closed mouth gathers no foot.