Gulf Today

Online myth busters fight tide of fake news

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NEW DELHI: As grief and outrage over the rape and murder of an eight-year-old crescendoe­d in India last week, a wrenching video of the supposed victim singing “her last song” lit up phones across the country.

But it was a hoax. The clip was nearly a year old and the girl someone entirely different, a lie that was discovered by a team of fact checkers who debunk the “fake news” shared by millions of Indians every day.

It is a herculean task exposing fake news before it spreads like wildire in India, where an estimated quarter of a billion people use Facebook, Whatsapp and other social media platforms.

Small teams of myth busters must compete with huge volumes of content being shared in a multitude of languages, in many cases by irst-time internet users unskilled in discerning fact from iction.

Independen­t fact checkers know the stakes are especially high in India, where fake news has quickly ignited violence.

Erroneous rumours of a salt shortage sparked panic across four states in November, triggering stampedes outside marketplac­es that left one woman dead and countless injured.

Angry mobs in eastern India beat seven men to death in May after they were accused of child traficking in unveriied messages circulated on social media.

Govindraj Ethiraj, founder and editor of Boom, a fact-checking website, said his team encountere­d at least a dozen instances of fake news a day “that can cause serious harm”.

“India is perhaps the only country where there are such violent outcomes of fake news,” he told AFP.

“The way it manifests itself in India, I don’t think it happens in any other country. We are worst affected by this menace.”

Boom, which revealed the viral clip of the alleged child rape victim to be a fake, has just six people on its staff and is one of a handful of independen­t fact-checking teams in India.

Facebook this week announced a partnershi­p with Boom to monitor state polls in Karnataka, its irst such initiative in India, as the social media giant faces global scrutiny over its platform being misused to meddle in elections.

India is one of the world’s largest and fastest-growing internet markets, with just over a third of its 1.25 billion people connected to the web.

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