The Great Cheapfakes Caper
When debunking misinformation turns into spreading it

When we list the groups that should be embarrassed by the Great Cheapfakes News Cycle of 2024, let's not leave out the alleged experts on detecting misinformation. It's not just that some of them wound up misleading people themselves—sadly, that's no longer novel. It's that they did it in one of the ways they spent years highlighting as an online hazard.
For those of you who have forgotten the cheapfakes caper, here's a quick review. Last June, the media suddenly overflowed with stories about videos that seemed to show then-President Joe Biden detached from the events unfolding around him. These press reports dubbed the clips "cheapfakes," a term that became increasingly infamous after Biden's decline became undeniable.
This expression was not invented in the Biden era; it's a play on "deepfakes" that's been around at least as far back as 2019. It's a dumb word for a real phenomenon: photos or videos that mislead not with sophisticated new technologies but through such low-tech manipulations as cropping something important out of the frame or just mislabeling what we're watching. (Think of all the times that footage from other wars, or even from a video game, has been presented as a scene from Ukraine or Gaza.) In their simplest form, these videos were an example of another misinfo-hunting buzzword: malinformation, a term the Department of Homeland Security defines as material "based on fact, but used out of context." If a clip shows Biden with his eyes closed at a D-Day event, as though he had fallen asleep, but the full context reveals that he had merely shut them for a short period while listening to a translation, then presto! That's malinformation.
Or maybe it isn't: Even with that extra context, we don't necessarily know whether Biden was briefly nodding off. But I'll concede the point. Some of those videos were in fact misleading. Real events were presented in a deceptive way.
But that's also true of many reports about the Biden "cheapfakes," stories that bubbled over with quotes from people presented as experts on misinformation.
Two things were true at the same time: (1) Joe Biden was losing his grip, and (2) some of the videos proffered to prove this were junk. If you filed a story that focused on only the second truth while implying but never outright stating that the first truth was false, you could leave your readers with the wrong impression without ever saying a lie. Maybe because you set out to dupe people, or maybe because you yourself were so caught up in confirmation bias that you were blind to what you were doing.
And so you got passages like this lede to a piece The Washington Post ran last year:
President Biden, who at 81 is a couple of decades younger than many of the veterans he honored during Thursday's D-Day commemoration in Normandy, nonetheless found his age and fitness in the spotlight as selectively edited clips of him circulated online to paint the picture of a physically and mentally challenged commander in chief.
Every word of that sentence is true! Biden is indeed younger than those World War II vets. Some of the clips bopping around the internet were indeed selectively edited. But looking back 11 months later—hell, looking back two weeks later, in the aftermath of Biden's disastrous debate with Donald Trump—do those really seem like the two most salient facts?
People have been known to deploy the word malinformation in a bad-faith way. (As my colleague Jacob Sullum once cracked, the term sometimes seems to mean material that is "true but inconvenient.") But as with cheapfakes, there is a real phenomenon lurking behind the neologism. It is common, very common, for people to deceive by leaving out important context rather than lying outright. If you're serious about sorting truth from fiction, you need to be on alert for material that is, as the man from Futurama put it, "technically correct, the best kind of correct."
Yet the line between information and malinformation can be blurry, because there's always more context that can be added. This very article you're reading right now is missing all sorts of potentially relevant information. If you're a Republican, you might be seething that I haven't gone looking for a larger pattern of pro-Biden bias at certain outlets. If you're a Democrat, you might be tearing out your hair watching me build a whole article around Biden's mental decline without asking if President Trump's head is fully functional. I might reply that those just aren't the subjects of this story, but no doubt there are reporters who would say the same thing about the pieces on cheapfakes that they cranked out a year ago. I think there's a difference, but I also realize that we're looking at shades of gray. The moment you move beyond the limited task of judging whether an individual video is legit—the moment you're writing a bigger piece on those clips and What They Mean—is the moment you step into that gray zone.
So "malinformation" is real, but it is also capacious enough to swallow nearly everything. To quote Dan Williams, a philosopher at the University of Sussex who has established himself as one of the most capable critics of the conventional wisdom in this area, if you expand "misinformation" beyond clear-cut falsehoods to mean "anything that leads people to be misinformed," you'll find that "misleading communication isn't just widespread. It's so widespread in media, political communication, and social science that the concept of misinformation will either become useless or be applied in highly selective ways." Indeed, "cherry-picking, framing, and the omission of inconvenient context are endemic to almost all political communication and punditry. Which politicians or pundits present the 'whole truth' about an issue?"
The cheapfakes caper shows that even debunking misinformation can be misinformative, or malinformative, or whatever the proper adjective is here. We should still debunk things, of course. But one round of debunking won't always be enough.
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He”s sharp as ever!
I can barely even keep up with him! Kackle, kackle, kackle.
To be fair, that is probably true for most media talking heads.
Jesse Walker?
Jesse is perpetuating the myth that Biden's decline wasn't obvious until after the June debate.
No he isn't.
* This was before the debate.
* He acknowledges Biden was already losing his grip.
You are a perfect example of what he's talking about, cherry picking, taking things out of context, and seeing what you want to see,
He says it "became undeniable" after the debate. Sorry but it was undeniable for years prior - to anyone with eyes and ears.
You just keep digging that hole. Yes, it was known during the 2020 election, and he doesn't deny that, he doesn't even mention it, because it's no more germane to his point that Biden's previous career as Senator or Vice-President.
LOL. Funny how Jesse couldn't be bothered with obvious truths while his buddies were outright lying. Hilarious how you're focused on his dishonest framing as if it were straight.
Yeah, but, some people were denying it, until the debate. After the debate, a lot fewer people were willing to continue to do that.
If the Powers That Be tackle Biden's age and mental acuity issue now (with zero repercussions BTW), they can use it against Trump later. They can even say "hey, were being fair here, remember when we went after Joe, one of our own?"
The only Democrat that will be mad about it is Jill.
>>the groups that should be embarrassed by the Great Cheapfakes News Cycle of 2024
somebody get this guy a mirror?
It's been obvious he wasn't all there for a long time.
"Lets do pushups together" -2019
"Lying dogface pony soldier" -2018
"Corn Pop was a bad dude" -2017
"Clap for that you stupid bastards" -2016.
"Get a shotgun and fire 2 blasts!" -2013
Among, many, many others. How many times did his staff "walk back" things Joe said during his term?
But Joe was good to go, up until that debate!
To be fair: Joe Biden and staff have been walking back statements since before plagiarizing the Limey PM(?) speach that got him knocked out of the 88 presidential race.
Hidding him in the basement, should have been the nail though. Oh your too old and frail to campaign; next in line please.
The problem is writing opinions instead of posting the facts. Why is Jessie justifying calling the videos deep fakes when they showed the truth? The fact remains, Biden was declining, sleeping, checking his watch, trying to shake the hand of a ghost, speaking to his dead friends and being escorted by the Easter Bunny in those videos? The amount of the video shown or how it was cropped does not and did not change these truths and the truth was not deep faked. Unlike the Russia Russia Russia collusion hoax or the Hunter Biden Laptop is Russian disinformation misinformation, malinformation campaigns waged by the media and the DNC. It was not selective editing to create a false impression of Biden's decline or Harris' incompetence, etc in question. It was the media selectively editing to create false impressions of the two being competent, up to the task, sharp as a tack or in any way, shape, or form being capable of doing the job that were the deep fakes perpetrated and propagated. Oh and of course, mostly peaceful protests while cities burned and businesses were destroyed...
Try reading it again. His point is the manipulated truth, not the truth itself.
This story leaves out the fact that KJP stated repeatedly that the videos were both cheapfakes and deepfakes. Cheapfake is a murky term, but deepfake is provably false. There were none.
One example of her calling the videos Deepfakes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkRtcD3gNoo
It also leaves out what Biden ate for breakfast.
There's so much TDS raging through these comments, perfectly illustrating the point of the article. I'm almost ready to think Jesse Walker wrote it that way on purpose just to show how rampant TDS is.
How dare you bully a man with cancer who stutters!
Accepted.
That's a whole lot of words when “The corporate press is the enemy of the people and lying propagandists.” will do.
"Fuck you if you can't handle the truth. This version of Biden, intellectually, analytically, is the best Biden ever."
When he was younger he was smarter, but being smarter got in the way. Now that he is dumber, he is better. Dumb Biden is the best possible Biden. - Major News Media
When? Day One.
Reminds me of the online Fact-Checkers.
Is this true?
Evidence exhibit #1 shows that it is true.
Evidence exhibit #2 shows that it is true.
Evidence exhibit #3 shows that it is true.
Conclusion?
[WE] rule this as FALSE because "Orange man bad!"
It is down-right funny. You can get all the evidence you want from false-narrative "fact checkers".
Or circular references with the fact checkers just referencing each other in a big circle jerk.
LOL... 🙂 Right. Reason pulled one of those off the other day. I had to double to check to make sure the author wasn't referencing his own article as a reference.
Malinformation.
Disinformation.
Misinformation.
Let's just say it like it is instead of playing semantics: they are liars.
**When debunking misinformation turns into spreading it**
Every. Single. Time.
I'm sure everyone has learned from this and will use it to grow personally and professionally.
People have been known to deploy the word malinformation in a bad-faith way.
It would help your understanding of the world to recognize journalists approach journalism in a bad-faith way. Their approach is to assert the best defensible position for their team. They never even try to explain the truth. Once you drop this expectation you'll never be surprised by their mistakes again because it perfectly explains their actions.
Here at Reason we refer to this as the JeffSarc Tactical Doctrine.