Ahead of the Daily Mail (27. 5 million) and The Guardian (24 million) which are the most consulted press titles online. Teens are interested in the news! This is one of the findings of the report. 60% of 12-15 year-olds say they are interested in the news . Those who are not interested find it presented in a "boring" way . But ¾ of them access news at least once a week. Television remains the main means of access for this age group (29%), followed by social networks (21%) and finally "talking with family" (15%).
Egambling data ukven among this age group since 40% of 12-15 year olds watch either BBC One or BBC Two. A downward trend with a loss of 5 points in one year. Teenagers then get their information from Facebook (32%) and YouTube (30%). When it comes to trusting a source of information, 12-15 year-olds consider family to be the most trustworthy for 80% of them , followed by radio (77%) and television (70%).
Social networks are at the back of the pack with only 35% of them trusting the information found on the platforms. More surprisingly, this age group is fully aware of fake news . 87% of them have already heard of it compared to 78% in 2018. More worryingly, half of 12-15 year-olds have already seen it compared to 43% in 2018.Stray links: global warming, fake news and “sustainable” information personal data August 3, 2019 Reading time: 6 min Share Things to remember this week: After another heatwave in France and Greta Thunberg's speech before the Senate last week, the news this week is still revolving around the climate , and the public is (finally) paying more attention to topics that talk about global warming .
The BBC is also establishing itself as a reference in information
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