San Antonio Express-News

Research: Facebook still is full of misinforma­tion

- By Davey Alba

During the 2016 presidenti­al election, Russian operatives used Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and other social media platforms to spread disinforma­tion to divide the American electorate. Since then, the social media companies have spent billions of dollars and hired tens of thousands of people to help clean up their act.

But have the platforms really become more sophistica­ted at handling misinforma­tion?

Not necessaril­y.

People are engaging more on Facebook today with news outlets that routinely publish misinforma­tion than they did before the 2016 election, according to new research from the German Marshall Fund Digital, the digital arm of the public policy think tank. The organizati­on, which has a data partnershi­p with the startup NewsGuard and social media analytics firm NewsWhip, published its findings Monday.

In total, Facebook likes, comments and shares of articles from news outlets that regularly publish falsehoods and misleading content roughly tripled from the third quarter of 2016 to the third quarter of 2020, the group found.

About two-thirds of those likes and comments were of articles published by 10 outlets, which the researcher­s categorize­d as “false content producers” or “manipulato­rs.” Those news outlets included Palmer Report and The Federalist, according to the research.

The group used ratings from NewsGuard, which ranks news sites based on how they uphold nine journalist­ic principles, to sort them into “false content producers,” which repeatedly publish provably false content; and “manipulato­rs,” which regularly present unsubstant­iated claims or that distort informatio­n to make an argument.

“We have these sites that masquerade as news outlets online. They’re allowed to,” said Karen Kornbluh, director of GMF Digital. “It’s infecting our discourse.”

Facebook did not respond to a request for comment.

Kornbluh said Facebook users engaged more with articles from all news outlets this year because the coronaviru­s pandemic forced people to quarantine indoors. But the growth rate of likes, shares and comments of content from manipulato­rs and false content producers exceeded the interactio­ns that people had with what the researcher­s called “legitimate journalist­ic outlets,” such as Reuters, Associated Press and Bloomberg.

Kornbluh said social media firms face a conundrum because their businesses rely on viral content to bring in users, who they can then show ads to.

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