With the fragmentation of truth in the “post-truth world” we need to nurture social truths and build useful paths for collective understanding:
- Build trusted frameworks for information by promote fact-checking and transparency. Encourage platforms and networks to integrate transparent mechanisms for verifying claims (e.g., open fact-checking databases with linked sources). This builds credibility and promotes critical thinking. Create public knowledge hubs like Wikipedia as examples of crowdsourced truth. Amplify and protect such spaces to ensure they remain accessible. Support grassroots independent media by championing smaller, decentralized media networks (like #OMN) that prioritize transparency, ethics, and local reporting counteracting monopolized narratives.
- Reinvigorate the commons shared networks for dialogue by creating spaces (both online and offline) where diverse perspectives can engage in structured, mediated discussions. Encourage participatory governance (like the #OGB) of digital communities to nurture shared norms around truth and actions. Open hashtag networks can help, use hashtags to aggregate diverse perspectives under common topics, encouraging tagging flows that emphasize collaboration over conflict.
- Human-centric storytelling can help, use narratives to illustrate the human cost of disinformation and the value of truth.
- Encourage peer-moderated content and support networks where trust grows organically through consistent, verified contributions (e.g., OMN’s tagging model). Human relationships first before diving into debates—trust grows when people feel heard, not combative. Highlight smaller community efforts to reach agreements on shared realities, which can then scale regionally and globally.
- Grow a culture of open inquiry to embrace complexity, not all questions have simple answers—it’s okay to live with uncertainty while seeking truth. Balance humility, with a mindset of curiosity and openness to change one’s mind when confronted with new evidence. Public challenges with collective projects (crowdsourced investigations and open debates) to involve diverse voices and establish transparency in seeking truth.
- Develop social tools that bring attention to high-consensus content to balance polarizing materials. Tagging paths can build social consensus, use hashtags to organize content. The messy semantic web tools like the #OMN can foster collaborative environments where context and trust are added into content flows.
Addressing the Chicken-and-Egg Problem, to overcome the challenge of needing a critical mass to build momentum (e.g., hashtags gaining traction only when widely used). Start small by beginning with focused communities that share a commitment to truth and scales organically. Use catalysts, leverage influential advocates and events to draw attention to the importance of shared truths. Incentivize participation with recognition, visibility, and other motivators for contributions to truth-oriented networks. On this path, by growing the emphasis on collaboration, openness, and trust, we can compost the barriers to building shared social truths. What do you think?