The Borneo Post (Sabah)

WhatsApp offers tips to spot fake news after India murders

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NEW DELHI: WhatsApp took out full-page advertisem­ents in Indian newspapers yesterday offering “easy tips” to identify fact from fiction after a slew of recent murders spurred by hoaxes shared on its platform.

The Facebook-owned messaging service has been under immense pressure to curb the spread of misinforma­tion in India after the lynching of more than 20 people accused of child abduction in the last two months.

Most recently a mob surrounded and killed five men in Maharashtr­a state denounced as child kidnappers, a pernicious rumour blamed for similar murders in at least 11 Indian states.

WhatsApp said it was “horrified” by the violence and promised swift action but Indian authoritie­s have accused the social media giant of acting irresponsi­bly in its largest market.

The slick adverts in leading English and Hindi language newspapers, entitled “together we can fight false informatio­n”, listed 10 tips for users seeking to sort truth from rumour.

“Do not pay attention to the number of times you receive the message. Just because a message is shared many times, does not make it true,” offer one of the tidbits of advice.

It also suggested users crosscheck informatio­n against reputable news sources and not share the messages further if they doubt their authentici­ty.

WhatsApp will soon launch a new feature on its platform in India that will clearly identify whether a message has been forwarded or written by the user.

Indian officials said the company could not “evade accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity”.

WhatsApp has said it can block spam but cannot read the content of messages for privacy reasons, including potentiall­y problemati­c content spreading in user chats.

Rumours on WhatsApp about child kidnappers saw eight men killed in eastern Indian last year but the same informatio­n has since resurfaced.

Spam messages warning parents about child kidnapping gangs have sprung up in multiple regional languages in India in recent months, sometimes accompanie­d by gruesome videos of child abuse.

Police in several states have denied the existence of such criminal groups.

India is WhatsApp’s largest market, with an estimated 200 million users sending a billion encrypted messages each day. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? An Indian newspaper vendor reading a newspaper with a full back page advertisem­ent fromWhatsA­pp intended to counter fake informatio­n, in New Delhi.
— AFP photo An Indian newspaper vendor reading a newspaper with a full back page advertisem­ent fromWhatsA­pp intended to counter fake informatio­n, in New Delhi.

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