Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

WhatsApp ‘horrified’, will sanitise platform

- Vidhi Choudhary and Jatin Gandhi letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: Instant messaging service WhatsApp on Wednesday listed measures to prevent the spread of false informatio­n in India even as the government under lined the need for the Facebook-owned firm to do more while calling its response “prompt”.

The measures include new updates for group chats and the potential launch of a specific label to identify forwarded messages. The firm plans to create a system for preventing­the spread of fake news and provocativ­e texts in consultati­on with academic experts and law-enforcemen­t agents. The measures were listed in a letter written in response to a government miss ive expressing “deep disapprova­l” about WhatsApp’s inability to prevent the spread of “irresponsi­ble and explosive material”.

Fake videos and rumours of child-lifting circulated via Whats A pp have triggered lynchings in at least eight states. Union informatio­n technology minister Ra vi S hank ar Pr as ad said the California based company’ s response carried assurances but they were not enough .“Social media platforms can not be allowed to abuse India by forces inimical to the country.”

He called on social media companies to work closely with the government to ensure their platforms are not used to harmpeo- p le .“India is Whats App’ s largest market. That bestows upon them an important responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity. Their network hasbeen misused for instigatin­g killings.” WhatsApp has a twopronged strategy to prevent the recurrence of such incidents: Giving people the controls and informatio­n they need to stay safe and working proactivel­y to prevent the misuse of the service.

“In mid-May, we added new protection­s to prevent people from adding others back into groups they had exited — a form of misuse we think is important to correct. And last week, we launched a new setting that enables administra­tors to decide who gets to send messages within individual groups ,’’ the firm said in the letter.

“This will help reduce the spread of unwanted messages in important group conversati­ons, besides the forwarding of hoaxes and other content.”

The company said it has also been testing a “new label” that highlights forwarded messages, as opposed to those composed by the sender, to prevent misuse. “This could serve as an important signal for recipients to think twice before forwarding messages because it lets a user know if the content they received was written by a known person or a potential rumour from someone else,” the letter said.

The company had tied up with Boom Live – a fact-checking organisati­on – to curb fake news ahead of the Karnataka elections in April. “Boom Live – available on WhatsApp – has published numerous important reports on the source of rumours that have contribute­d to the recent violence,” the letter said.

On Tuesday, the company announced WhatsApp Research Awards for Social Science and Misinforma­tion in an effort to understand how online platforms are used to spread misinforma­tion. “This local research will help us build on recent changes made within WhatsApp and support broad education to help people spot false news and hoaxes,” it said. Besides this, the company plans to run long-term public safety ad campaigns in India to explain how fake news and hoaxes can be spotted.

WhatsApp is using machinelea­rning technology to identify problemati­c accounts.

“Because we cannot view the content of messages being sent over WhatsApp, we block messages based on user reports and the manner in which they are sent. We use machine-learning to identify accounts that send a high volume of messages (faster than any human can) and are constantly working to improve our ability to plug unwanted automated messages,” the letter said. According to lawyer Apar Gupta, the spread of online misinforma­tion is not a problem that WhatsApp can offer solutions for in a vacuum. “Framing this as a problem that is principall­y on WhatsApp or any social media problem is missing the point. This is principall­y a policing failure given the present social atmosphere in which lynchings are happening due to increasing divisions along lines of religion, caste and communitie­s,’’ he said.

THE COMPANY SAID IT HAS ALSO BEEN TESTING A “NEW LABEL” THAT HIGHLIGHTS FORWARDED MESSAGES, AS OPPOSED TO THOSE COMPOSED BY THE SENDER, TO PREVENT MISUSE.

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