Khaleej Times

Only people can curb fake news

- Madeleine de CoCk BuninG & miGuel PoiaRes maduRo — Madeleine de Cock Buning is Professor of Digital Politics and Societies in the School of Transnatio­nal Governance at the European University Institute; Miguel Poiares Maduro is Director of the School of T

Today, debates about public issues play out on social media, people receive their news via digital platforms, and politician­s pitch their policies using these same media. The Internet is our new public square. In the public square of old, journalist­s and editors served as gatekeeper­s and acted as referees. Human news aggregator­s set the agenda and provided audiences with credible informatio­n and a diversity of views. We trusted them because of the profession­alism and integrity of their editorial processes.

In the new public sphere, this model of journalism – and of journalism’s role in sustaining democracy – has become obsolete. Traditiona­l media no longer play a dominant gatekeepin­g and agenda-setting role. Fake news can reach multiple jurisdicti­ons at once.

But so can public and private measures that censor speech. The challenge is to redefine the parameters of civil discourse in the new public sphere without restrictin­g pluralism. Recent examples highlight the risk of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

Despite the ominous headlines, the influence of fake news on political decision-making appears to be limited. According to the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, the reach of such content is largely restricted to groups of believers seeking to reinforce their own views and prejudices. But that does not make digital deception any less dangerous. Fake news feeds – and is fed by – polarizati­on, and, paradoxica­lly, the more it is discussed, the more disruptive it becomes.

That is because fake news undermines trust in all forms of media and reinforces the view that it is impossible to discern fact from fiction. When people do not know what they can believe, journalist­s’ ability to police the powerful is weakened. This trend will only worsen as “deep-fake news” – bogus images and videos that appear real – becomes more ubiquitous.

Clearly, the vulnerabil­ities of the digital public sphere must be addressed. Some argue that the solution is to block questionab­le websites or demote search results. Facebook, for example, censors duplicitou­s posts and has created an election “war room” to fight disinforma­tion. Other global platforms, like Google and Twitter, have considered similar steps, and all three are being pressured to give authoritie­s access to the private data of users who publish fake news or make defamatory statements. But we believe that these steps, while seemingly prudent, are deeply misguided.

At the heart of any strong democracy is a political consensus and arbitratio­n that depends on the public’s ability to debate and disagree. It is not up to private entities – or public institutio­ns, for that matter – to censor this process. Rather, we should be working to ensure that citizens have access to a broad array of opinions and ideas and understand what they are reading, viewing, or hearing. Freedom of expression includes the right to receive and impart informatio­n without interferen­ce, which implies the corollary values of media freedom and media pluralism as enshrined in the EU’s Charter of Fundamenta­l Rights. A March 2018 report to the European Commission by the High-Level Group on Fake News and Online Disinforma­tion, offered a roadmap, and the recent European Commission Action Plan provides a good starting point. But more needs to be done.

For example, profession­al media must do more to guarantee the veracity of their coverage. Fact-checking technology can help, as long as it is kept free of political and economic influence. Google, Facebook, and Twitter should stay out of the fact-checking business.

Big Tech is starting to take responsibi­lity by committing to a Code of Practice based on the ten key principles from the High-Level Report. But “Big Tech” can contribute in other ways, such as by providing client-based interfaces for curating legitimate news, ensuring diversity in social-media timelines, and making a high priority of reposting fact-checked informatio­n. Platforms can also improve transparen­cy in how they use data and code algorithms.

Platforms must also clearly identify news sources, especially paid political or commercial content. We also need new internatio­nal collaborat­ion and better jurisdicti­onal rules to ensure that laws and regulation­s protect victims of fake and offensive news without restrictin­g free speech or underminin­g the rights of whistleblo­wers.

Finally, platform companies should cooperate with schools, civil-society groups, and news organizati­ons to strengthen the public’s media literacy. Well-intentione­d efforts to scrub the new public square of disinforma­tion will certainly backfire; only consumers can marginaliz­e fake news. We cannot allow private companies or government­s to decide what people should know. The history of democracy is clear on this point: pluralism, not private or public censorship, is the best guarantor of truth.

Google, Facebook, and twitter should stay out of the fact-checking business

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