Manila Bulletin

Comelec forms team to report online fake news

- By BLOOMBERG

In the Philippine­s –where 76 million Internet users stay online the longest in the world –just a handful of people spend a few hours each day to fight fake news about the upcoming midterm elections.

The Commission on Elections has formed a team of 10 government workers to spot and report misleading online posts to Facebook Inc., with whom the poll body has an agreement to quickly take down false informatio­n. Weeks before the May 13 elections, the group has already identified hundreds of fake news posts –mostly those claiming ballots have been tampered with, or that the poll results are predetermi­ned.

“What we’re trying to do is to institutio­nalize this reporting process in a way that Facebook will not have any other recourse but to act on it,” Election Commission spokesman James Jimenez said in an interview. “Fake news could affect how people see the credibilit­y of the elections and the mandate of the winner.”

With more voters using social media now, the election body expects fake news to spread faster this time compared to the 2016 vote, when President Rodrigo Duterte won. Still, Jimenez said the team formed to fight fake news is not enough to adequately combat disinforma­tion.

“We only have 10 people, so you just cast as wide a net as possible to fight fake news as much as you can,” he said.

Facebook last month removed 200 pages and accounts found to be misreprese­nting themselves. It also earlier partnered with local media groups to debunk false posts on its platform.

The social media giant is taking steps to prevent the spread of fake news on its platform in time for the elections,

particular­ly by removing fake accounts and educating people on how to spot false posts, its Manila office said in a statement on Saturday.

"We have invested heavily in people and technology to better identify and remove abuse, particular­ly around elections," it said.

Three universiti­es and 11 news organizati­ons have also teamed up to spot fake news and fact check candidates’ statements.

The group – which calls itself Tsek.ph and follows a similar coalition in Indonesia called Cekfakta – monitors online posts using an app and categorize­s them as either accurate, false, misleading, no basis or needs context. It also accepts suggestion­s from Web users on sites that should be scrutinize­d.

“Tsek.ph is as much a user of social media as producer of verified informatio­n, so all we can really do is flag dubious sites,” said Rachel Khan, journalism professor at the University of the Philippine­s, a member of the consortium. “We will give the public a source of verified informatio­n and hope that it will influence them to make the right decisions.”

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