The Phnom Penh Post

FB will alert if a story may be fake

- Hayley Tsukayama

FACEBOOK has struggled for months over whether it should crack down on false stories being spread on its site. Now, it has finally come to a decision.

The social network is going to partner with the Poynter Internatio­nal Fact-Checking Network, which includes groups such as Snopes, to evaluate articles flagged by Facebook users.

If those articles don’t pass the smell test for the fact-checkers, Facebook will pass on that evaluation with a label whenever they are posted or shared, along with a link to the organisati­on that debunked the story.

“We have a responsibi­lity to reduce the spread of fake news on our platform,” said Facebook’s Adam Mosseri, a vice president, in an interview with the Washington Post. Mosseri added that Facebook still wants to be a place where people with all kinds of opinions can express themselves. And Facebook has no interest in being the arbiter of what’s true and what isn’t for its billion users, he said.

The system will work like this: If there’s a story out there that’s patently false – saying a celebrity is dead when they aren’t, for example – then users will see a notice saying that the story has been disputed or debunked. People who try to share stories that have been found false will also see an alert before they post. Flagged stories will also appear lower in the News Feed than unflagged ones.

Users will also be able to report potentiall­y false stories to Facebook, or send messages to the person posting a questionab­le article directly.

The company is focusing, for now, on what Mosseri called the “bottom of the barrel” websites purposeful­ly set up to deceive and spread fake news.

“We are not looking to flag legitimate organisati­ons,” Mosseri said. “We’re looking for pages posing as legitimate organisati­ons.” Articles from legitimate sites that are controvers­ial or even wrong shouldn’t get flagged, he said.

There is no blacklist of sites that will automatica­lly have their stories sent on, Mosseri said. But Facebook has built a sort of profile of characteri­stics fake news articles share – such as low share numbers after the headline is clicked – which it will use to decide when to have something fact-checked.

The company will also prioritise checking stories that are getting lots of flags from users and are being shared widely.

If someone wants to appeal a label, they can direct that complaint to the fact-checking organisati­on that made the call on whether an article was true or not.

 ?? IMAGES COURTESY OF FACEBOOK ?? Facebook will start alerting people when third-party fact-checking organisati­ons have disputed the accuracy of an article.
IMAGES COURTESY OF FACEBOOK Facebook will start alerting people when third-party fact-checking organisati­ons have disputed the accuracy of an article.

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