ZeMKI, Centre for Media, Communication and Information Research News values in fake news: study on global differences published News23. January 2025 A new study by ZeMKI members Sami Nenno and Prof. Cornelius Puschmann from the DCID Lab, published in “The International Journal of Press/Politics”, examines the variation of news values in fake news in non-Western countries. While the majority of content analysis of misinformation to date has focused on so-called WEIRD countries (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic), Sami Nenno and Cornelius Puschmann take a closer look in their study entitled “All The (Fake) News That’s Fit to Share? News Values in Perceived Misinformation across Twenty-Four Countries” focuses on the dynamics in non-WEIRD countries. Based on an extensive data set of URLs that were reported as “fake news” on Facebook in 24 countries, Nenno and Puschmann analyse the content according to five news values: conflict, negativity, proximity, individualization and informativeness. The results show significant differences in the characteristics of these news values, both between WEIRD and non-WEIRD countries and between posts reported as fake news and those not reported. Abstract While there is a strong scholarly interest surrounding the content of political misinformation online, much of this research concerns misinformation in Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich and Democratic (WEIRD) countries. Although such research has investigated the topical and stylistic characteristics of misinformation, its findings are frequently not interpreted systematically in relation to properties that journalists rely on to capture the attention of audiences, that is, in relation to news values. We close the gap on comparative studies of news values in misinformation with a perspective that emphasizes non-WEIRD countries. Relying on a dataset of URLs that were shared on Facebook in twenty-four countries and reported by users as containing false news, we compile a large corpus of online news items and use an array of computational tools to analyze its content with respect to a set of five news values (conflict, negativity, proximity, individualization, and informativeness). We find salient differences for almost all news values and regarding the WEIRD/non-WEIRD and flagged/unflagged distinction. Moreover, the prevalence of individual news values differs strongly for individual countries. However, while almost all differences are significant, the effects we encounter are mostly small. Title: All The (Fake) News That’s Fit to Share? News Values in Perceived Misinformation across Twenty-Four CountriesAuthors: Sami Nenno und Cornelius PuschmannDOI: 10.1177/19401612241311893 Full article Persons Prof. Dr. Cornelius PuschmannSami Nenno Labs Lab Digital Communication and Information Diversity