Deutsche Welle (English edition)

India fake news problem fueled by digital illiteracy

Fact checkers in India have a hard time quashing quicksprea­ding misinforma­tion online. Low media literacy and cultural biases have caused people to follow through on dangerous impulses.

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In the summer of 2018, rumors began circulatin­g on WhatsApp groups about a kidnapping gang operating in India's western state of Maharashtr­a.

The rumors eventually inspired a lynch mob that killed five migrant workers who were suspected of being kidnappers after they arrived at a village in the state's Dhule district.

This wasn't an isolated case. Child-abduction rumors spread by viral WhatsApp messages were connected to at least 17 murders across India in 2018. Rumors of cattle traders and organ harvesters also resulted in violent attacks on innocent people.

Since then, India's fake news problem has continued to grow. More than 400 million Indians now use the internet, but digital literacy and social media regulation have yet to catch up.

"People get cheap internetba­sed tech on their smartphone­s, but they don't have the necessary education on how to assess the veracity of claims made in the messages," said Rajneil Kamath a publisher at the Indian fact-checking portal Newschecke­rIn.

"Sometimes they are duped by fake job schemes or fake mobile recharge schemes through forwarded messages they receive," Kamath told DW.

More recently during the coronaviru­s pandemic, credible news was often drowned out by unverified informatio­n online. Misinforma­tion related to false cures and conspiracy theories caused panic, anxiety and fear as the virus was spreading.

"India's first wave of COVID misinforma­tion revolved around the origin, causes, spread, and treatment of the virus. Then it quickly converted to propaganda and disinforma­tion," said Shalini Joshi, a program director at Meedan, a fact-checking software company.

"We think of this as a 'misinfodem­ic,' or the spread of a disease facilitate­d by viral misinforma­tion," Joshi told DW.

The role of religion and media

India's religious fault lines have also been a major contributo­r to the spread of fake news online.

Disinforma­tion targeting Muslims spiked in April last year after several members of an Islamic group who had attended a religious gathering in Delhi tested positive for COVID-19.

False claims began to circulate that Muslims were a vector of the virus. Several fake videos went viral, including a series that claimed Muslim youth were being injected with COVID-positive blood. In some places, this led to attacks on frontline workers.

"Some violence that recently happened against the minority communitie­s in India can be attributed to the radicaliza­tion of individual­s who have been consuming hate speech, disinforma­tion and propaganda for a long time," said Pratik Sinha, founder of Alt News, a factchecki­ng website.

"It is contributi­ng to the polarizati­on of communitie­s which will have a far-reaching impact," he told DW.

"It is very easy to delegitimi­ze people and organizati­ons in present-day India."

Traditiona­l media outlets can also disseminat­e misinforma­tion or propaganda, despite having more mechanisms to separate fake news from fact. The message is then amplified at a much larger scale.

Nikhil Pahwa, a digital rights activist and founder of the MediaNama news portal, told DW that during Modi's demonetiza­tion campaign, a mainstream TV channel broadcast rumors started on WhatsApp about GPS tracking chips in banknotes.

Fact-checking can't keep up

While there are several factchecki­ng organizati­ons, their efforts are often overwhelme­d by the volume of fake news being circulated.

"Fact-checking takes time and journalist­ic effort, while manufactur­ing misinforma­tion takes very little time," said Pahwa.

"Misinforma­tion relies on appealing to the recipients' inherent biases and their emotions, which lends itself to wider appeal and virality. Fact-checking is often bereft of emotion, and doesn't get sufficient visibility because of its inherent lack of virality," he said, adding that algorithms reward sensationa­lism.

"On WhatsApp, there are establishe­d networks for sharing misinforma­tion, while none exist for sharing facts checked."

The ecosystem of fake news and divisive propaganda works well due to India's low literacy rates.

Pahwa believes that platforms need to address algorithms that put engagement above all else.

WhatsApp has also realized the gravity of the problem. In 2018, it added a feature in India that limited forwarding news to a maximum of five chats.

However, WhatsApp said it has no control over the content being shared as it is encrypted end to end.

"We have made significan­t product changes and worked with partners across civil society, engaged with relevant government authoritie­s and other technology platforms to help address the harmful consequenc­es of misinforma­tion," WhatsApp said in a statement to DW.

Limits of technology

Debunking false news remains a human job, and that's the reason most fact-checking organizati­ons employ journalist­s, public policy experts and data scientists who spot and debunk fake narratives.

Using artificial intelligen­ce to counter fake news is limited by design.

"There is no AI in the world that can spot fake news without an available reference system. Automation doesn't mean AI has any clairvoyan­t abilities. We are creating such databases in various Indian languages," said fact-checker Kamath.

However, he also believes that fact checking can take off organicall­y.

"In December alone we had about 15,000 new users on WhatsApp who wanted to verify claims," he said.

"Once satisfied with facts, they came back again by bringing more instances of misinforma­tion from their groups and networks. We hope that factseeker­s will grow like this."

 ??  ?? In India, fake news is exacerbate­d by ethnic and cultural tensions
In India, fake news is exacerbate­d by ethnic and cultural tensions

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