Toronto Star

Facebook takes steps to halt fake news

Company has enlisted help of third-party fact checkers to balance truth and opinion

- GERRY SMITH BLOOMBERG

Last week, a story claiming that Ford Motor Co. was moving truck production from Mexico to Ohio went viral on Facebook. “The Trump Effect: It’s Happening Already!!” the Facebook user Right Wing News wrote. That story was actually based on a CNN report from 2015, before Donald Trump was even the Republican nominee for president.

The post was neither entirely true nor completely false. It fell into a grey area in the nuanced world of fact-checking, highlighti­ng the thorny challenge of cracking down on fake news. While some articles are obviously fake, like one about the Pope endorsing Trump, many others are misleading, exaggerate­d or distorted, but contain a kernel of truth. They require judgment calls, and it can be hard to tell where to draw the line, profession­al fact-checkers say.

“It is a very slippery slope,” said Eugene Kiely, the director of FactCheck.org, a non-profit that aims to reduce the level of deception and confusion in U.S. politics. “There’s bad informatio­n out there that’s not necessaril­y fake.”

Facebook is taking steps to address its role in spreading fake news, such as enlisting the help of third-party fact checkers, chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg said Friday in a post. The social network was widely criticized for allowing false stories to circulate in the run-up to the U.S. presidenti­al election, potentiall­y influencin­g its outcome. Zuckerberg underscore­d the delicate balance his company must strike, saying “we need to be careful not to discourage sharing of opinions or mistakenly restrictin­g accurate content.”

“We do not want to be arbiters of truth ourselves, but instead rely on our community and trusted third parties,” he wrote.

Yet profession­al fact-checkers say Facebook must not punish articles that are partially accurate. They say their jobs, like the truth, can be complicate­d, which is why they grade stories on a scale. For example, Snopes.com called the Ford Ohio story “mostly false,” and labels others “unproven” or a “mixture” of true and false. The fact-checking website PolitiFact uses labels like “true,” “half true,” or “pants on fire.” Facebook’s algorithm may not understand the various shades of falsehood.

“It’s easy to see how an algorithmo­nly solution to fake news could result in blocking stuff that’s not false or is misleading for reasons that are partisan but not inaccurate,” said A- lexios Mantzarlis, who leads Poynter’s Internatio­nal Fact-Checking Network.

One article that circulated widely on Facebook before the election claimed Bill and Hillary Clinton had stolen White House furniture. The allegation actually dates back to when the Clintons left the White House. They returned many pieces of furniture and paid the government back for some gifts, according to PolitiFact, which concluded a version of the story contained “several inaccuraci­es” and was “mostly false,” but added “there is a grain of truth.”

“Did they steal furniture from the White House?” FactCheck.org’s Kiely said. “That’s a judgment call.”

In recent days, media critics and fact checkers have suggested a variety of ways that Facebook could address the problem of fake news. One solution: Facebook could tweak its algorithm to promote related arti- cles from sites like FactCheck.org so they show up next to questionab­le stories on the same topic in the news feed. Last month, for example, Google announced that it would start labelling fact-checked articles in Google News results.

“If we’ve all looked at it and all agreed this is something that is false or misleading, there should be a way to push that up and bring that to the attention of the reader,” Kiely said.

Facebook should also make it easier for users to flag fake news and see which media company published the story, according to John Borthwick, chief executive officer of Betaworks, and Jeff Jarvis, the director of the Tow-Knight Center for Entreprene­urial Journalism at the City University of New York. In a posting on Medium.com, they suggested the media companies and social-media sites collaborat­e with each other to address the problem.

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