Andrew Weiss is a digital services librarian at California State University, Northridge, with over fifteen years of experience working in academic libraries. He focuses primarily on scholarly communication issues, especially open access, copyright policy in academia, institutional repositories, and developing better strategies for data curation. He is currently a PhD student with Manchester Metropolitan University in the San Jose State University Gateway program. His current and prior research examines fake news and disinformation; the impact of massive digital libraries such as Google Books, the HathiTrust, and the Internet Archive; the future developments of open access publishing; the impact of 'Big Data;' and, last but not least, information ethics. He lives in Los Angeles with his family.
Counterfact is a well-informed description of fake news and false information that offers recommendations about how to mitigate these in a clearly written practical manner. This will be of great use to librarians and scholars who study the nature and use of information. Counterfact is a well-informed description of fake news and false information that offers recommendations about how to mitigate these in a clearly written practical manner. This will be of great use to librarians and scholars who study the nature and use of information. --James W. Cortada, co-author of Fake News Nation: The Long History of Lies and Misinterpretations in America