Oman Daily Observer

The fight against political disinforma­tion

- ROB LEVER

As social media firms ramp up their fight against misinforma­tion, politician­s have been largely left exempt. To some, that’s a huge problem. Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms have decided to allow politician­s including President Donald Trump extra leeway to their rules, seeking to avoid stifling political debate and leaving “newsworthy” content online.

But Trump’s efforts to push falsehoods and conspiracy theories have prompted calls for platforms to rethink those guidelines to prevent the president and others from spreading false and misleading informatio­n.

Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Joe Biden recently asked Facebook to take down “debunked” claims in a Trump ad on the leading social network, only to be rebuffed.

In a response to Biden, Facebook said statements by politician­s, even if false, are “considered direct speech and ineligible for our third-party fact checking programme.” Senator and presidenti­al candidate Kamala Harris meanwhile called on Twitter to ban Trump after the president violated the platform’s rules by accusing his critics of “treason” and warning that an attempt to impeach him amounted to a “coup.” The candidates’ demands are typical of the conundrum social media firms face as they seek to remain open for public debate while curbing “hate speech,” abusive conduct and patently false claims from politician­s.

Facebook and Twitter have both steered away from removing “newsworthy” content which may include false or misleading comments from political leaders. Youtube exemption.

This policy “seems like a troubling compromise because it’s an invitation to political actors to say whatever they think is expedient whether it’s true or not,” said Paul Barrett, Deputy Director of the Stern Center for Business and Human Rights at New York University and author of a report on “Disinforma­tion and the 2020 Election.” Barrett’s report recommends that social networks take down “provably false” informatio­n, though he acknowledg­ed that would leave big loopholes for politician­s stretching the truth.

The report noted that a majority of deliberate­ly deceptive or false informatio­n shared on social media comes not from Russia or other foreign sources but from within the United States, making it more complicate­d to take down.

“It’s a real conundrum. I don’t think there’s a an easy answer,” Barrett said. offers a similar ‘VECTORFORM­ISINFORMAT­ION’ Facebook Vice President Nick Clegg said last month the social network would treat speech from politician­s “as newsworthy content that should, as a general rule, be seen and heard.” Gaurav Laroia of the watchdog group Free Press said exceptions allowed by Facebook means the company “is allowing its platform to be a vector for misinforma­tion in the lead-up to the 2020 election.” Facebook’s ad policies leave a gaping loophole for Trump, the biggest political ad spender on the platform, as he faces a congressio­nal impeachmen­t inquiry, according to Free Press.

Senator Elizabeth Warren, another presidenti­al candidate, accused Facebook of buckling to pressure from the White House on political misinforma­tion.

“Trump and (Facebook CEO Mark) Zuckerberg met at the White House two weeks ago. What did they talk about?” Warren tweeted.

Samuel Woolley, a University of Texas professor who has researched manipulati­on in the 2016 election campaign, agreed that social networks need to step up against misinforma­tion, whatever the source.

“False informatio­n coming from a political leader is much more potent than if it were coming from a bot or fake account,” Woolley said.

Whether social networks have the capacity to rapidly detect and remove false informatio­n is an open question, but Woolley said it is their responsibi­lity.

“Social media companies created this problem, they made clear decisions to scale at this rate, so I feel it’s up to them to use their massive resources to address this problem through technology and human labour,” he said.

Social media companies created this problem, they made clear decisions to scale at this rate, so I feel it’s up to them to use their massive resources to address this problem through technology and human labour

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