Race towards breaking news has resulted in misinformation, says senior journalist.

Senior journalist Lubna Jerar Naqvi said the race in releasing news as soon as it breaks has resulted in misinformation.

Addressing a discussion on fake news and the legal repercussions for media organisations that generate fake news, organised by the Coalition for Women in Journalism (CFWIJ) at the Karachi Union of Journalists' office, Naqvi said: "The use of the term (fake news) is wrong. This means that the content is fake - the right term to use is misinformation or disinformation."

According to a press release issued on Friday, CFWIJ global coordinator Luavut Zahid and researcher Rabia Mushtaq had organised the discussion with Naqvi and Supreme Court Advocate Shoaib Ashraf.

Naqvi said that in Pakistan the issue stems from the need of local newsrooms to break the story first.

"Journalists are constantly trying to find stories that can captivate attention. The race towards breaking news first has resulted in many releasing information before it has been confirmed. This is just bad journalism.

"Don't chase breaking news, chase good journalism," she said, adding that people were gradually understanding that verification is "extremely important" and "finding news is not good enough".

"It is the duty of the journalists to filter content to ensure that no misinformation is being released," she said and added that such checks just take minutes.

"If journalists fail to properly verify news they can lead themselves, and their organisations, into disaster," Naqvi explained.

Meanwhile, Ashraf explained the four...

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