Shanghai Daily

Check your facts: Twitter takes tougher approach

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IN addition to disputing misleading claims by US President Donald Trump about mail-in ballots this week, Twitter has added fact-checking labels to thousands of other tweets since introducin­g the alerts this month, mostly on posts about the coronaviru­s.

The company does not expect to need additional staff for the undertakin­g, Twitter spokeswoma­n Liz Kelley said on Saturday, nor is it partnering with independen­t factchecki­ng organizati­ons, as Facebook and Google have, to outsource the debunking of viral posts flagged by users.

Fact-checking groups said they welcomed Twitter’s new approach, which adds a “get the facts” tag linking to more informatio­n, but said they hoped the company would more clearly lay out its methodolog­y and reasoning.

On Friday, Chief Executive Jack Dorsey acknowledg­ed the criticism, saying he agreed fact-checking “should be open source and thus verifiable by everyone.” In a separate tweet, Dorsey said more transparen­cy from the company was “critical.”

The company’s move to label Trump’s claims about mail-in ballots separates it from larger competitor­s such as Facebook, which declares its neutrality by leaving factcheck decisions to thirdparty partners and exempts politician­s’ posts from review.

“To a degree, factchecki­ng is subjective. It’s subjective in what you pick to check, and it’s subjective in how you rate something,” said Aaron Sharockman, executive director of US factchecki­ng site PolitiFact.

Twitter telegraphe­d in May that its new policy of adding factchecki­ng labels to disputed or misleading coronaviru­s informatio­n would be expanded to other topics.

It said this week — after tagging Trump’s tweets — that it was now labeling misleading content related to election integrity.

Twitter’s Kelley said the team is continuing to expand the effort to include other topics, prioritizi­ng claims that could cause people immediate harm.

A Twitter spokesman said the company’s Trust and Safety division is tasked with the “leg-work” on such labels, but declined to give the team’s size.

This week, Twitter defended one of these employees after he was blasted as politicall­y biased by Trump and his supporters over 2017 tweets.

Twitter also drew Trump’s ire for putting a warning over his tweet about protests in Minnesota over the police killing of a black man for “glorifying violence,” an enactment of a 2019 policy that was long-awaited by the site’s critics.

In the tweet, Trump warned the mostly African-American protesters that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” a phrase used during the civil rights era to justify police violence against demonstrat­ors.

(Reuters)

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