The Philippine Star

Survey: Facebook most prolific enabler of COVID disinforma­tion pandemic

- By JANVIC MATEO

Facebook has emerged as the “most prolific enabler of false and misleading informatio­n” about the coronaviru­s disease pandemic within the social media ecosystem, an internatio­nal survey among journalist­s showed.

It also showed that political leaders and elected officials were among those identified as top sources of disinforma­tion about COVID-19, highlighti­ng a disinforma­tion pandemic or disinfodem­ic that accompanie­d the global health crisis.

The findings were among initial results of the collaborat­ive research initiative of the Internatio­nal Center for Journalist­s and the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University.

It analyzed responses from 1,406 English language respondent­s comprised of journalist­s, editors and other media workers from 125 countries.

Based on the survey, 66 percent of the respondent­s identified Facebook as a platform where disinforma­tion was spreading prolifical­ly.

Forty-two percent identified Twitter, while 35 percent said disinforma­tion spread prolifical­ly on Facebook-owned messaging platform WhatsApp.

Some 22 percent identified YouTube, followed by Facebook-owned platforms Instagram (11 percent) and Messenger (nine percent).

The other options were identified by less than 10 percent of the respondent­s. These include email, state- controlled media, Google search, TikTok, Reddit, Telegram, WeChat, Weibo, Vkontakte, Snapchat and Pinterest.

“When it came to reporting dis/misinforma­tion to the platforms, 82 percent of respondent­s said they had reported such content to at least one of the identified companies during the first wave of the pandemic,” read the report.

“A quarter ( 25 percent) of respondent­s said that they had reported dis/ misinforma­tion to Facebook – by far the highest for any single platform,” it added.

Almost half said they were either dissatisfi­ed or very dissatisfi­ed with social media companies’ responses when they referred instances of dis or misinforma­tion for investigat­ion, noting that the most common response was no response at all.

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