The title suggests that you can read in the article B2C Telemarketing List what time Arie Boomsma opens his diary, but that information is not in the article . And the picture? It has nothing to do with the content of this article, but comes from a video that Boomsma shared B2C Telemarketing List months earlier. An incorrect connection is often used to attract attention, including by marketers. The target audience is deliberately misled in the hope that they will open the B2C Telemarketing List content. It may not be neat, but there is usually no malicious intent behind such an incorrect connection. 3. Misleading Frame In a misleading frame ( misleading content ) information is shared unilaterally in order to frame something or someone in a certain way.
There is often nothing wrong with the information B2C Telemarketing List itself. But the problem is, the information doesn't tell the whole story. Or that it is (consciously or unconsciously) misinterpreted. The misleading frame often popped up during the B2C Telemarketing List corona crisis, for example in the discussion about vaccines. Science journalist Maarten Keulemans often speaks B2C Telemarketing List out on Twitter against this kind of fake news. For example, in the tweet above, he debunks the message that the Pfizer vaccine is deadly. The message comes from an official scientific study. Nothing fake about it. But it's not the whole story. That same study says no deaths in the study group were related to the vaccine.
But that does not tell the person who shares the B2C Telemarketing List original message. In this way, correct information can also mislead. Also read: Deep fakes: how AI makes fake news even more dangerous 4. Misleading Context In misleading B2C Telemarketing List context ( false context ) we are still dealing with information that is true in itself. But with this form of fake news, the information is placed in a different context. For example, think of old B2C Telemarketing List information that is presented as new. Screenshot of Abbie Richards' Tweet about fake news This happens a lot with social media content surrounding the Russian invasion of Ukraine.