

Eliot Higgins: Algorithms don’t drive the truth
Aug 19, 2025
Eliot Higgins, founder of Bellingcat and open-source journalism advocate, dives into the critical fight against misinformation online. He emphasizes the urgent need for transparency and trustworthy media, as conspiracy theories proliferate in a fractured information landscape. Higgins discusses the shifting responsibility of information verification from institutions to individuals and stresses the need for grassroots efforts to rebuild trust in public institutions. He calls for a revival of local media and the importance of community engagement in fostering informed democracies.
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Algorithms Amplify Engagement, Not Truth
- Algorithms amplify what users engage with, not what is true, shaping fragmented information realities.
- That reinforcement creates different realities for different groups and deepens polarisation.
Distrust Shifts Verification To Communities
- Distrust in institutions drives people to alternative online systems where verification shifts to communities.
- Those spaces prioritise in-group affirmation over seeking objective truth, worsening democratic fracture.
Deliberation Becomes Group Performance
- Online discourse often becomes in-group versus out-group performance rather than genuine deliberation.
- Members attack dissenters to protect identity, undermining verification and accountability functions.