The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

What they’re saying elsewhere Firms share responsibi­lity for fake news

It has been more than a week since Las Vegas police stormed Stephen Paddock’s hotel room at Mandalay Bay, finding him dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound and surrounded by a personal arsenal of modified rifles. And in that time, we’ve learned quite a

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We know he was 64, had a house in Reno, a brother in Florida and a girlfriend he sent to the Philippine­s. We know he was a real estate investor and a gambler. We know he expressed no specific political ideology.

This is real, factual, vetted news and anyone can find it online. But in the hours after Paddock fired bullets into a crowded country music festival, hitting 547 people in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history, facts were hard to distinguis­h from falsehoods on Google, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

Hoaxes and conspiracy theories got dredged from the sewage-like depths of the internet. Wildly false rumors were dressed up as truth and put into widespread circulatio­n. Items on the notoriousl­y toxic 4chan network and Russian propaganda site Sputnik claimed the shooter was a liberal who hated President Donald Trump and loved MSNBC host Rachel Maddow, and was tied to Islamic State terrorists.

Once again, the Silicon Valley platforms that dominate public discourse and serve as a de facto source of informatio­n for billions of people delivered fake news that was damaging as well as confusing. How long will this go on? Two-thirds of American adults now get their news from social media. Facebook alone reaches a quarter of the human race.

After the dust-up over Russian bots and surreptiti­ously purchased political ads designed to influence last year’s presidenti­al election, the executives of these California tech companies promised they would do better.

Behind the scenes, Facebook has agreed to partnershi­ps with some news organizati­ons to increase the company’s credibilit­y. And separately, Google and Apple worked with a few news outlets to steer people toward legitimate sources of informatio­n during Hurricane Irma.

However, to the extent Silicon Valley felt urgent responsibi­lity for the broader risks being posed, it wasn’t apparent. Pressed on why so much fake news surfaced after the shooting in Las Vegas, social media companies put out tone-deaf, boilerplat­e statements citing technical difficulti­es.

“Unfortunat­ely,” Google explained, “early this morning we were briefly surfacing an inaccurate 4chan website in our search results for a small number of queries. Within hours, the 4chan story was algorithmi­cally replaced by relevant results. This should not have appeared for any queries, and we’ll continue to make algorithmi­c improvemen­ts to prevent this from happening in the future.”

On why Facebook’s “Trending Stories” section was suggesting an article from the Russian propaganda site Sputnik alongside articles from legitimate news agencies, a spokespers­on said: “Our Global Security Operations Center spotted these posts this morning and we have removed them. However, their removal was delayed, allowing them to be screen captured and circulated online.”

YouTube also changed its search algorithm to net more videos from mainstream news outlets — although it didn’t say which outlets counted as mainstream — after the site became clogged with conspiracy theories after the Las Vegas shooting.

But rampant disinforma­tion isn’t just a question of finetuning some coding. It’s also a question of who will be accountabl­e for lies, now that people can use technology to game the narratives that shape our civilizati­on.

Social media has revolution­ized our ability to communicat­e, but it has also made it easier to amplify and distort that communicat­ion. Who must take responsibi­lity for that? Certainly not the machines.

Facebook, Twitter and Alphabet’s Google and YouTube must make dramatic changes, and soon. Beyond the responsibi­lity that comes with such ability to influence, they could run a real risk of being regulated by Congress.

Change won’t come easily. Billions of dollars in advertisin­g revenue depend on maximizing the number of people spending time online.

But fake news isn’t a sustainabl­e business. Only 37 percent of web-using adults believe the informatio­n they get from social media. That can’t be a promising metric.

There is no algorithmi­c shortcut for the responsibi­lity humans have to society, to the truth and to each other. It’s time for Silicon Valley to show us it shares our values.

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