Business Day

Real411 is back to help fight fake news epidemic

• Detection service will identify and take down harmful falsehoods

- Lesley Stones ●

ll South African citizens who stay at home to avoid spreading the Covid-19 virus are entitled to a government grant of R785 a day, a WhatsApp message announces, giving you a link to click for advice on how to claim.

Or maybe you received a WhatsApp quoting the latest infection figures, followed by the phone number of someone selling a device to “zap” the virus and save your life.

The only thing spreading faster than the coronaviru­s is fake news, including miracle cures from scamsters capitalisi­ng on disaster, false informatio­n that could prevent someone from taking the correct precaution­s, or racist slurs that could incite violence.

The team at Media Monitor Africa and its director, William Bird, probably don’t know whether to laugh or cry at this social media madness or the fake facts published in the formal media. But they’ve taken action by relaunchin­g their fake news detection service, the Real411, to identify and take down falsehoods that could influence people’s thinking.

Real411 was originally launched to counter disinforma­tion ahead of SA’s elections and it’s been repurposed to fight the Covid-19 scaremonge­ring. Fittingly, plans for a physical media conference were scrapped and the relaunch was streamed live on Twitter, with the panellists sitting well spaced out with no audience.

It takes its name from the slang of 411 to mean genuine informatio­n, dating from dialling 411 to get the phone number of anyone listed in the US phone directory.

“Some people spread misinforma­tion from ignorance or stupidity. Often there’s a very deliberate political motive, and some — well, I don’t want to say evil — but there are bad people who think it’s fun to cause harm,” says Bird.

The complaint-reporting

Asystem was created by Media Monitoring and Assemble, a Johannesbu­rg-based“developmen­t house. We ’ re quite proud of it,” says Bird. “We did it for the elections and it was a world first, and it’s cool to know that in SA we can do things that so-called developed nations aren’t doing.”

The sort of reports it aims to quash are like the one that claimed only people of colour can get the virus, which may encourage others to ignore social distancing and cause widespread infections.

Anyone can go to the Real411 website and lay a complaint against an article or post in any of the official languages. A digital complaints committee comprising a legal expert, a digital expert and a media expert will review the article. If they uphold the complaint, they can ask the online platforms to remove it, refer it to the police, the Human Rights Commission, the Equality Court or other relevant bodies, or publish a counter-narrative.

INDIVIDUAL­S CAN GET MORE INVOLVED BY TRAINING AS A NEWS VIGILANTE, SURFING THE SOCIAL MEDIA STREAMS TO SEEK OUT FALSEHOODS

“It’s an entirely digital process so people lodge a complaint online and we get an alert and it gets reviewed according to the criteria for disinforma­tion, incitement, hate speech or attacks on journalist­s,” says Bird. “There are very specific questions they have to answer according to the law, and if it’s misinforma­tion like ‘eating beetroot cures Covid-19’ we send it to the platform like Google, Facebook, Twitter or WhatsApp and say this is disinforma­tion, please remove it.”

Real411 has a good relationsh­ip with those internatio­nal organisati­ons. Backing from the government, the SA National Editors’ Forum and the Human Rights Commission should encourage these social media platforms to support its decisions.

Its team members communicat­e via a chat channel, and they may decide to publish a counter-narrative of correct informatio­n refuting the original post. That will name the person responsibl­e for misinforma­tion, and if that person disagrees with the rebuttal they can appeal to the Real411, which has recruited judge Zak Yacoob as its overall adjudicato­r.

While anyone can file a complaint through the Real411 website, individual­s can get more involved by training as a news vigilante, surfing the social media streams to seek out falsehoods. Joining its official “Spotters Network” could be a fun way to brighten up endless days of self-isolation. First you download the RoveR app and take some tests to learn what to look for. The training uses articles that were genuinely published, though the “facts” sometimes turned out to be fiction. It’s a bit like Tinder, swiping left for rubbish and right for good.

There’s one about former DA leader Mmusi Maimane’s wife filing for divorce after he had an affair with his cousin. Swipe left, that’s nonsense. The story about a new drug turning Durbanites into zombies? Swipe left. The one about transport minister Fikile Mbalula posting a photo of a sexy policewoma­n — swipe right, that was genuine.

While the examples used in the RoveR tests are quite amusing, fake news often causes serious harm. A new HBO documentar­y called After Truth: Disinforma­tion and the Cost of Fake News, highlights an attempted murder triggered by false informatio­n on the social news aggregatio­n site Reddit.

Leaked e-mails were distorted to create an inflammato­ry theory that a child abuse ring was based at a pizzeria in Washington.

The disinforma­tion spread on Facebook and Twitter and pictures of the owner with his godchildre­n were used to brand him a paedophile. Callers issued death threats, then a man drove for six hours to enter the pizzeria with a gun, incited by online forums to rescue the children. No-one was hurt, but it highlighte­d the terrifying ability of fake news and the inflammato­ry fuel of Facebook and Twitter to provoke dire consequenc­es.

With the Covid-19 pandemic, reliable informatio­n is literally a matter of life and death.

“Disinforma­tion destroys democracy,” Webber Wentzel’s online libel expert, Dario Milo, said at the Real411 relaunch. “Disinforma­tion is basically a lie where you know what you are saying is false, and we have seen some very high-profile examples about Covid-19 that were designed to look authentic but weren’t. That’s what Real411 is there to address. It takes a long time to get vindicatio­n through the courts so an initiative like this is absolutely critical because it bypasses the legal system and allows it to be dealt with quickly.”

The initiative is strengthen­ed by the new regulation­s under the Disaster Management Act to criminalis­e the publicatio­n of any statement through any medium with the intention to deceive about Covid-19, the infection status of any person, or any measures taken by the government to address it, with a fine and/or imprisonme­nt of up to six months.

WE HAVE SEEN SOME VERY HIGH-PROFILE EXAMPLES ABOUT COVID-19 THAT WERE DESIGNED TO LOOK AUTHENTIC BUT WEREN’T

See www.real411.org.

 ?? /123RF/Chaiyawat Sripimonwa­n ?? Changing the picture: The Covid-19 pandemic has thrown up miracle cures from scamsters capitalisi­ng on disaster, false informatio­n that could prevent someone from taking the correct precaution­s and racist slurs that could incite violence.
/123RF/Chaiyawat Sripimonwa­n Changing the picture: The Covid-19 pandemic has thrown up miracle cures from scamsters capitalisi­ng on disaster, false informatio­n that could prevent someone from taking the correct precaution­s and racist slurs that could incite violence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa