The following are a series of questions to ask yourself whenever you encounter a source, whether online, through social media, recommended by a friend, or in a library database.
Assessing authority can be tricky, but we often do it pretty hastily and without thinking. The following questions are designed to help you slow down and reflect on the authorship and authority of the sources you encounter.
Finally, we often assess the scope, currency, and coverage of sources without thinking, but they can tell us a lot about a source, and whether they are appropriate to our research.
Whether an image has been altered, and where it has traveled on the web
Quick way to check how and in what context an image has been shared (and fact checking articles are often among the first results)
A more sophisticated reverse image search.
Recognizing photomontage or modified photos
Sophisticated analysis of the quality of a photo, especially possible modifications. Includes great tutorials and exercises.
Analyzes metadata attached to photos that may include type of camera or device used, date, location where photo was taken.
Tracing Memes
Memes are images, videos, text, usually ironic or satirical, that becomes viral. These two tools help you track the creation and diffusion of the most well known viral memes.
Focused on hoaxes including viral images.
Analyzing Video
View original upload data and analyze individual screenshots (which you can reverse image search). Sponsored by Amnesty International. Try also Frame by Frame for YouTube a Chrome extension to analyze a video frame by frame and look for out of place details.
Creates panorama photos out of a sequence of video - can be useful to ID the location of the video.
