The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Group: Bad info on rise on Facebook

An advocacy group tracking misinforma­tion says it has found an increase in fake political news shared on Facebook ahead of the 2020 presidenti­al elections.

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What’s happening

The group, Avaaz, said Wednesday that misinforma­tion is still being spread on Facebook despite measures the company has put in place since the 2016 elections.

The researcher­s tracked the 100 most widely shared false news stories between Jan. 1 and Oct. 1 this year. The stories they tracked had all been fact-checked and debunked by Facebook’s third-party fact-checking partners, which include The Associated Press.

What it found

The group found that, collective­ly, the fake stories were posted more than 2.3 million times and had an estimated 158.9 million views, along with 8.9 million likes, comments and shares. The false stories targeted both political parties, though Avaaz says the majority were against Democrats and liberals. Most of the false news sources were individual users’ or nonofficia­l political pages.

Avaaz, a left-leaning online advocacy group, said stories it found spread even after they were debunked. That included one falsely claiming that President Donald Trump’s grandfathe­r was a pimp and a tax evader and that his father was a member of the Ku Klux Klan. That story had an estimated 29 million views. Another story falsely claiming that

Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar attended an al-Qaeda training camp had an estimated 770,000 views.

What’s being done

In response to the report, Facebook said it has taken steps to reduce the number of false news items posted and shared on its service, including more prominent warning labels on the content.

“Multiple independen­t studies have found that we’ve cut the amount of fake news on Facebook by more than half since the 2016 election,” the company said.

Avaaz said in the report that the findings are the “tip of the iceberg of disinforma­tion” ahead of the 2020 elections.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Facebook said it has taken steps to reduce the number of false news items posted and shared.
DREAMSTIME Facebook said it has taken steps to reduce the number of false news items posted and shared.

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