Culture How Gen Z Became the Most Gullible Generation - The almighty algorithm is fueling conspiracy theories among young people and ruining their ability to tell fact from fiction on the internet.

How Gen Z Became the Most Gullible Generation
Politico (archive.ph)
By Catherine Kim
2025-04-23 11:16:00GMT

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Illustration by Seba Cestaro for POLITICO

The video starts with bold red letters blaring: “2016 Democrat Primary Voter Fraud CAUGHT ON TAPE.” A series of blurry security footage follows, showing blatant instances of ballot stuffing. The only problem: The clips actually depict voter fraud in Russia.

Would you have taken the bait?

A quick Google search would have easily revealed the dubious source of the video, along with news articles debunking its claims. But when researchers from Stanford studying young people’s media literacy — the ability to accurately evaluate information in the wilds of mass media — showed the video to 3,446 high school students, only three succeeded in identifying the Russian connection.

“There is this myth of the digital native, that because some people have grown up with digital devices, they are well equipped to make sense of the information that those devices provide,” says Joel Breakstone, who led the 2021 study. “The results were sobering.”

It’s a startling reality about Gen Z, backed up by multiple studies and what we can all see for ourselves: The most online generation is also the worst at discerning fact from fiction on the internet.

That becomes an issue when the internet — and specifically, social media — has become the main source of news for the younger generation. About three in five Gen Zers, from between the ages of 13 and 26, say they get their news from social media at least once a week. TikTok is a particularly popular platform: 45 percent of those between the ages of 18 and 29 said they were regular news consumers on the app.

While social media may make news more accessible, there’s also little quality control to the information on the platforms. And although people of all ages are bad at detecting misinformation — which is only getting harder amid the rise of AI — members of Gen Z are particularly vulnerable to being fooled. Why? There’s a dangerous feedback loop at play. Many young people are growing deeply skeptical of institutions and more inclined toward conspiracy theories, which makes them shun mainstream news outlets and immerse themselves in narrow online communities — which then feeds them fabrications based on powerful algorithms and further deepens their distrust. It’s the kind of media consumption that differs drastically from older generations who spend far more time with mainstream media, and the consequences can be grim.

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Gen Z is the most online generation but the worst when it comes to discerning fact from fiction on the internet. | Photo Illustration by Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

I’ve seen it happen in my own social circles, where friends in their 20s will start to regurgitate what they see on TikTok as if it is fact. My friends and I often now make it a point to ask if the “source” someone has gotten their information from is a TikTok video, and whether they’ve at least looked it up on Google afterward. The answer is usually no.

The misinformation people see on TikTok and other social media ranges from nefarious to absurd: Famously, there was a period when some young people on the app seriously questioned the life story of Helen Keller, who found success despite being deaf and blind (“Did she get any kind of money for lying her way through life??” one user asks). Just last year, when Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton hit North Carolina and Florida, claims the government was “geo-engineering” the weather gained traction on social media, as people suggested that Democrats were behind the ravaging of Republican-dense areas. Beef tallow as skincare is the latest trend. If some teens next to you smell like fryer grease, they might have fallen victim to videos that claim beef fat is good for your face, despite warnings from dermatologists.

The common thread in all these viral conspiracy theories on TikTok is that they are fueled by distrust of institutions — from schools to the National Weather Service to the medical establishment. And that sentiment carries over to the media: Only 16 percent of Gen Zers have strong confidence in the news. It’s no surprise then that so many young people are shunning traditional publications and seeking their news on social media, often from unverified accounts that do little fact-checking.

The ramifications are potentially huge for American politics. Without some sort of course correction, a growing piece of the electorate will find itself falling victim to fake news and fringe conspiracy theories online — likely driving the hyperpolarization of our politics to new heights.



When it comes to fact-checking, Gen Z tends to have its own distinct method: Opening up the comment section.

“They tend to feel comfortable relying on aggregate trust, so they’ll rely on Yelp reviews or Amazon reviews,” says Daniel Cox, a pollster who surveys young people. “This sounds like a very similar thing, right? They’re seeing what other people are saying about an article or a product and basing their decisions on that.”

In the era of the almighty algorithm, however, the comment sections are often echo chambers. There are few countervailing notions there because the algorithm feeds the video to like-minded people who share the same perspective on the subject, regardless of its accuracy.

“[The algorithm] helps segregate people in ways that are profoundly concerning to me,” Cox adds. “We’re not sharing the same experiences online — we’re having very discrete, different experiences by our gender or sexual orientation or politics. … Everything that you’re experiencing, you can find some kind of validation online for it.”

And this is a bipartisan trend: President Donald Trump’s fans and haters are both just as likely to fall for fake information that already conforms to their worldview.

A prime example of this dynamic is a fake viral soundbite of Trump allegedly musing that the District of Columbia should be renamed the District of America. The audio has been debunked as AI-generated, but you wouldn’t know that when looking at the comment section of videos reacting in disbelief. In one video that’s gained over 250,000 likes, the comments don’t question the source of the audio clip but rather share the same horror. “Why do we have the dumbest president in American History??” reads the top comment. One must scroll far down the comment section to even spot a clarification from the video’s creator, who commented a day later: “I’m thinking it is AI.”

These echo chambers help explain Gen Z’s growing affinity for conspiracy theories. We’ve moved beyond the stereotype of the loner in the basement with the tin-foil hat; today it’s the TikTok addict enclosed in their political cocoon who is particularly vulnerable to misinformation.

Young people aren’t solely to blame for their lack of digital literacy.

In school, students are taught to read closely and carefully — which misinformation researchers say has unintentionally enforced the idea that students should drill into a single video and determine its accuracy with their eyes, rather than leave the page and open Google. The technology of misinformation is advancing rapidly, and it is becoming impossible to differentiate what’s true from what’s false with mere observation. For older generations, who came to the internet later in life, there’s still at least some natural skepticism toward what they see online. For the youth, it must be taught.

Gen Zers are uniquely vulnerable to misinformation compared to older age groups not just because of their social media habits, says Rakoen Maertens, a behavioral scientist at the University of Oxford, but because they have fewer lived experiences and knowledge to discern reality.

Maertens, who helped create a test that measures a person’s likelihood of being duped by fake headlines, says that while Gen Zers were most likely to fall for fake news now, there is hope that as time passes, they’ll become better at detecting falsities, just like the generations before them.

There’s also another, far more depressing alternative that may be just as likely — that the rest of the population will go the way of Gen Z.

After all, as the internet becomes ever more ingrained in people’s lives and more platforms adopt silo-fueling algorithms, even older generations that had held onto their skepticism may embrace the media consumption habits of the youth — and become just as susceptible to AI-fueled conspiracy theories and misinformation.

“It is a systematic issue,” Breakstone says. “The evidence is clear that folks of all ages struggle to make sense of the overwhelming amount of information that they encounter online, and we need to figure out ways to support people, to find better ways to make sense of the content that streams across their devices.”
 
"Maertens, who helped create a test that measures a person’s likelihood of being duped by fake headlines, says that while Gen Zers were most likely to fall for fake news now, there is hope that as time passes, they’ll become better at detecting falsities, just like the generations before them."

Translation - The younglings don't yet understand that speaking the truth can get them punished, hopefully we can teach them to take the easy route and start chanting the gospel of the 151 genders.
 
...so they're gullible and will believe anything the internet tells them?

This differs how exactly from Boomers believing everything journalists tell them? Or Millennials believing anything "experts" tell them in "studies" no matter how hard those conclusions fly in the face of observable reality?
 
Translation - The younglings don't yet understand that speaking the truth can get them punished, hopefully we can teach them to take the easy route and start chanting the gospel of the 151 genders.
I read it more that gen z will believe whatever they see because they're too lazy and stupid to google it
For older generations, who came to the internet later in life, there’s still at least some natural skepticism toward what they see online. For the youth, it must be taught
yep, too retarded and lazy to look into the bullshit they're looking at.
 
"Maertens, who helped create a test that measures a person’s likelihood of being duped by fake headlines, says that while Gen Zers were most likely to fall for fake news now, there is hope that as time passes, they’ll become better at detecting falsities, just like the generations before them."

Translation - The younglings don't yet understand that speaking the truth can get them punished, hopefully we can teach them to take the easy route and start chanting the gospel of the 151 genders.
Here's a handful of questions from the gay test, It doesn't tell you which are real and which are fake at the end of the test.
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Googling some of them proves them to be real 1:1 headlines, others (specifically "New Study: Clear Relationship Between Eye Color and Intelligence") are not real headlines but the information in the headline is correct, it's just not the headlines the media chose to run with also the articles fall outside of the time frame set in the quiz.
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(from the guardian)

So is this one true or false? Are they saying people are more susceptible to fake news because they distilled and remembered the truth behind the headline rather than the headline and its publication date?
 
It's odd listening to twenty-something year-olds talking about conspiracies that are so old they are almost urban legends at this point. Conspiracies like Bob Lazar or the Roswell incident. I guess the classics never really die, however, if you bring up actual conspiracies that have turned out to be true, such as the one in Mena, Arkansas, they tend to be disinterested. I think part of the fascination is that this generation uses podcasts for background noise, and conspiracies make for good background noise - it's something that you can listen to passively for hours without really having to think critically about it.

This is not a new though. It's similar to older forms of sensational media, like the TV shows Oak Island or "In Search of...". These kinds of shows are designed to entertain and intrigue, rather than to provide in-depth, fact based reporting. Likewise, conspiracy podcasts and YouTube channels often prioritize sensationalism over substance, making them more appealing as background noise than as a source of reliable information.
 
What is happening is the proliferation of the Internet has broken the (consolidated) media monopoly on information, that and the same effect has happened for the academics, the bishops are finding that the laymen can interpret things differently now that the printing press can mass produce books.
It is inevitable some people will misuse it and spread misinformation, but that is the point of freedom. Someone will misuse it. Frankly if you ask me it is far better than the alternative of iron grip control which allows for opinion to be directed and information censored since the damage that could cause is far far worse than some shit poster

As for the youngins being utterly trusting in the official "facts" would probably make you the odd one out. Ignoring the build up of the 2010s the pandemic and other horse shit of 2020 made a lot of people question things. There are still a great deal of unanswered questions and shit that doesn't add up from the official narrative from all the earth shattering bullshit that happened that year. The best example being the origin of Corona which is almost an open secret to the general public now that it was a lab born virus. Remember the zoomers were teens and young adults during that and saw the mass censorship and suffered the lockdowns at a critical part of their lives.

Also that test they provided. Like clockwork anti conspiracy theorists combine schizoramble theories like ebola being caused by nuclear weapons testing with ethnic demographic shift aka the great replacement. Infact looking it over again it seems they are trying to lump in strawman retard theories to cover up actual plausible theories (eye color IQ/race realism, vaccines have dangerous chemicals/the so called "vaccines" aka the MRNA injections, the nuclear ebola/Corona being lab created). To top it off, people not trusting NGOs

This is schlock of the highest degree

Edit. They used the holy number of 109 for the great replacement question.
 
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About three in five Gen Zers, from between the ages of 13 and 26
Please stop suggesting that 26 year old grown ass men and retarded 13 year old skibidi toilet enjoyers are anywhere near being in the same generation. I don't want to powerlevel but it's really annoying to be [INSERT ADULT AGE HERE] and get blamed for the actions of some fuckass nigger in middle school because we're both "Gen Z"
 
It's already been brought up but the most gullible generation was boomers and it's not even close. They had zero innoculation against propaganda because it had only been invented a few decades before them and the TV accelerated it like a rocketship. They were lied into war after war, lied into supporting corrupt politician after corrupt politician, lied into supporting the "civil rights" movements, lied into impoverishing their own children. To this day you constantly meet boomers who believe completely inaccurate things about the world because they've been gullible for so long that they don't understand reality. It's probably more common than an informed boomer.
 
It's already been brought up but the most gullible generation was boomers and it's not even close. They had zero innoculation against propaganda because it had only been invented a few decades before them and the TV accelerated it like a rocketship. They were lied into war after war, lied into supporting corrupt politician after corrupt politician, lied into supporting the "civil rights" movements, lied into impoverishing their own children. To this day you constantly meet boomers who believe completely inaccurate things about the world because they've been gullible for so long that they don't understand reality. It's probably more common than an informed boomer.
AI and deepfakes are a huge panacea for boomers and “disinformation” - if they do not like it, they claim it as AI nonsense and it is written off almost immediately. This is even more effective if mass media foments even a slight amount of doubt regarding the information, assuming it is not ignored outright.
 
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