The Asian Age

The big fight against fake news

- S. SHIVENDU

A BUZZFEED ANALYSIS FOUND THAT FACEBOOK NEWS FEED PLAYED A KEY CATALYST ROLE IN THE SPREAD OF TOP 20 FAKE NEWS STORIES RELATING TO THE 2016 US PRESIDENTI­AL ELECTION.

The rise and crowning of Donald Trump has led to global interest in the phenomenon of “fake news”, though the disseminat­ion of false and malicious informatio­n has been around for thousands of years. Rameses the Great, who was the second- most durable king of ancient Egypt, propagated a compelling story, with detailed accounts of battle scenes, of a stunning victory for Egyptians in the Battle of Kadesh, though now it is establishe­d that the battle was in fact a stalemate.

The Oxford Leaner’s Dictionary defines fake news as “false reports of events, written and read on websites”. While the problem of intentiona­lly malicious news stories in print media, or “yellow journalism” has been around for centuries, the Internet and webbased technologi­es have enabled the spread of false informatio­n at lightning speed with negligible costs to propagator­s.

Through freemium business models which generate advertisin­g revenue by merely attracting users to the website, unscrupulo­us media publishers find it profitable to publish sensationa­l and even false stories to earn profits. In turn, these fake stories spread to millions of users on social media. ( Freemium business model, especially on the Internet, is one by which basic services are provided free of charge while more advanced features must be paid for).

A Buzzfeed analysis found that Facebook News Feed played a key catalyst role in the spread of the top 20 fake news stories relating to the 2016 US presidenti­al election. Thus, platforms like Facebook and Google and cross- platform messenger apps like WhatsApp have also democratis­ed misinforma­tion, indoctrina­tion and spread of rumours. A BBC News story on December 5, 2016, said: “Many of the fake news websites that sprang up during the US election campaign have been traced to a small city in Macedonia, where teenagers are pumping out sensationa­list stories to earn cash from advertisin­g.” The phenomenon of news in the world of online communitie­s and platforms with global reach provides power to malicious elements without any commensura­te accountabi­lity and has the potential to disrupt the social order and adversely impact open societies in democracie­s. In July 2018, a British parliament­ary committee recommende­d that the UK government should hold technology companies responsibl­e and liable for “harmful and illegal content on their platforms” because “fake news” threatens democracy.

While it is acknowledg­ed that the originatin­g source for “fake news” may have malicious intent, the lightning spear of fake news is propelled by millions of social media platform users facilitate­d by technology companies like Google and Facebook, which owns WhatsApp, and Microsoft, which owns the search engine Bing. com. Due to First Amendment rights in the US which provide constituti­onal guarantee to free speech, and various legal provisions to protect freedom of expression in democratic societies, it is often hard to prevent a person from writing an article devoid of facts. Therefore, the key to combating the menace of fake news lies in users of social media platforms, technology companies and regulatory authoritie­s.

Increasing­ly, more government­s are rising to meet this challenge. A Singapore parliament­ary committee last week, as reported by Reuters, recommende­d that government­s should enact laws to ensure that technology companies implement measures to fight “deliberate online falsehoods”. This followed efforts to apply pressure on the UK, Germany, France and EU to regulate technology companies, requiring them to rein in fake news. Recognisin­g fake news is the first step that users of social media must take if they intend to be “part of the solution” rather than be “the problem”.

The Internatio­nal Federation of Library Associatio­ns and Institutio­ns ( https:// www. Ifla. org) provides a guide to assist users like us to recognise fake news. Most importantl­y, they suggest that readers should consider the reliabilit­y of source, assess the supporting sources, check the identity of authors, and most critically review their own biases before forwarding or broadcasti­ng that content to others.

Internatio­nal Fact- Checking Network ( https:// www. poynter. org/ channels/ factchecki­ng) operating since 2015 is an internatio­nal collaborat­ive effort and not only provides fact- checking services and training but has also published a code of principles. Government­s are also taking the lead and as a first, Taiwan has introduced a new school curriculum in 2017 that teaches students to identify propaganda and evaluate sources of online content through a new course called “media literacy”.

Technology companies like Google, Twitter, Facebook and Microsoft are also gearing up, willingly or unwillingl­y, to implement appropriat­e algorithms to fight the menace of fake news. After being in a state of denial for almost a year, Mark Zuckerberg in September 2017, admitted, “After the election, I made a comment that I thought the idea that misinforma­tion on Facebook changed the outcome of the election was a crazy idea. Calling that crazy was dismissive and I regret it. This is too important an issue to be dismissive.”

Twitter is creating Ads Transparen­cy Centre for political ads to ensure full disclosure, improving their algorithms to “stamp out bot accounts targeting election related content”, and proposes to “monitor trending topics and conversati­ons” for any fake news. Google is working on a four- step plan which requires advertiser­s to identify their location as well as provide credential­s, “provide disclosure­s on political ads”, including funding source, “release a transparen­cy report” on political ads and “publish a creative library where all the purchased ads are made public”. Facebook has been working on “increasing its political ads transparen­cy” and has added tools to

“fight fake news, with the use of machine learning and adding a ‘ Related

Article’ section in articles for context”.

While developmen­ts of the last two years, including the Cambri- dge Analytica scandal involving Facebook have highlighte­d the lurking dangers of online technologi­es facilitati­ng content sharing, users, technology companies and regulators have been increasing­ly taking proactive action to nip the menace of “fake news” in the bud.

A recent study by

Oxford University, relea- sed in July 2018, highlighte­d the danger of fake news and warned that “the weaponisat­ion of social media platforms like WhatsApp to spread fake news will gather momentum as India enters an election year”.

The key to fighting this menace lies in technology companies and regulators being vigilant and in proactive action by users like us to identify fake news and not be a tool in the hands of unscrupulo­us elements by spreading it.

( The writer is Associate Professor of Informatio­n Systems at University of South Florida. With additional inputs by Mridula Sinha, an independen­t policy analyst. Both were in the Indian Administra­tive Service before transition­ing into current careers)

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