The book received positive reviews from
The Guardian,
Financial Times,
Nature Magazine,
Psychology Today,
Kirkus, and
Publishers Weekly. In his last book review for
The Times,
David Aaronovitch thought the book was "timely" and that "van der Linden goes well beyond what more impressionistic writers of conspiracy theories and misinformation can manage". Although he was encouraged by the experimental research, noting that "the brain can form a sort of habit of seeing the patterns in misinformation and recognising it as it arrives", Aaronovitch did wonder whether deep
polarization in the US could be a potential barrier to van der Linden's inoculation approach. Writing for the
Washington Post, literary critic
Troy Jollimore disagrees with van der Linden on the aptness of the viral analogy to misinformation, and notes that the book ignores other historical issues, such as the education system being increasingly geared towards career training rather than teaching critical thinking. Jollimore also argues that bad actors can make use of inoculation. Ultimately, he does agree with van der Linden that "prebunking is probably our best strategy for winning the misinformation wars". Writing for the
Boston Review, philosophy lecturer Daniel Williams criticizes the scientific support for the book's claims, writing, "Foolproof’s argument, then, is not so foolproof. At least on the relatively narrow definition that van der Linden uses in the book, misinformation is not widespread ... And effective misinformation lacks an intrinsic DNA that neatly distinguishes it from true and reliable content." Writing for
Psychology Today, philosophers Andy Norman at
Carnegie Mellon University and
Lee McIntyre strongly disagreed with Williams, referring to the review as "specious" and "one-sided", containing logical fallacies such as posing the false dichotomy that the identification of misinformation is either fully context dependent or must have 'Foolproof' intrinsic DNA-like features. They argue the truth is in the middle and that Foolproof is "astonishingly well-researched." == References ==