Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Meta to prevent spread of false news on upcoming elections

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FACEBOOK and Instagram’s parent company, Meta, has set up teams of experts to prevent any unlawful interventi­on in elections, notably the upcoming local vote in Türkiye, according to a Meta official.

“In addition to constantly updating our election policies and detecting proactive threats, we help prevent any interventi­on in elections or voters by removing content that violates our community standards,” Meta Türkiye and Azerbaijan Public Policies Director Sezen Yeşil told Anadolu Agency (AA) a week ahead of the mayoral poll in Türkiye.

“Our experts are focusing on coordinate­d ill-use to intervene in public discourse,” Yeşil explained. “We immediatel­y take action when we detect such activity on our platforms, especially when it’s about elections.”

She said Meta had advanced security operations to bust manipulati­on campaigns and unearth emerging threats, listing the Advertisem­ent Library as one example.

Meta adds all political or election-based ads to this library to be preserved for seven years, allowing the public to see which ads are in circulatio­n, their targets and how much they’ve cost.

If anyone wants to put up an ad for elections or politics, the advertiser­s must prove who they are and where they reside.

“We’re constantly working to improve the transparen­cy of ads and honesty of elections on Facebook and Instagram,” Yeşil said.

The specifical­ly crafted spread of disinforma­tion and manipulati­ve schemes on social media venues to influence public perception about standing candidates or parties has long been public knowledge.

Similarly, fears of electoral interventi­on made headlines ahead of the presidenti­al and parliament­ary polls in May last year after social media giant X, then known as Twitter, was accused of censoring certain topics and amplifying opposition voices.

Yeşil’s assurance comes a week before the high-stakes local elections in which some 61.4 million eligible voters will elect new mayors and other office-holders in the local government­s of 81 provinces and districts.

According to the Supreme Election Council (YSK), the March 31 polls will see 1.32 million first-time voters at 206 voting stations set up nationwide.

Some 34 political parties are vying for mayoral seats in 973 districts and 390 towns, while 50,336 candidates are vying for the office of mukhtar in 81 cities.

The blackout period started last Thursday where broadcasti­ng or publishing polls, surveys, prediction­s and mini referendum­s to influence voters are prohibited. The propaganda period ends on Saturday, March 30, for all competing parties.

Istanbul is the most politicall­y important administra­tive city in Türkiye, so the mayoral race for Istanbul has been at the forefront of the campaignin­g period.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) is eager to regain the metropolit­an from Ekrem Imamoğlu, the mayor of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).

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