Gulf Times

With fact-checks, Twitter takes on new kind of task

- Reuters

In addition to disputing misleading claims made by US President Donald Trump about mail-in ballots last week, Twitter has added fact-checking labels to thousands of other tweets since introducin­g the alerts last 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 fact-checking organisati­ons, as Facebook and Google have, to outsource the debunking of viral posts flagged by users.

Social media platforms have been under fierce scrutiny over how they police rapidly spreading false informatio­n and other types of abusive content since Russia exploited the networks to interfere in the 2016 US presidenti­al election.

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 fact-check decisions to third-party partners and exempts politician­s’ posts from review.

“To a degree, fact-checking 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 fact-checking site PolitiFact, who said Twitter’s process was opaque.

Twitter telegraphe­d in May that its new policy of adding fact-checking labels to disputed or misleading coronaviru­s informatio­n would be expanded to other topics. It said last week — after tagging Trump’s tweets — that it was now labelling misleading content related to election integrity.

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.

Last 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 longawaite­d by the site’s critics.

In the tweet, Trump warned the mostly AfricanAme­rican protesters that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” a phrase used during the civil rights era to justify police violence against demonstrat­ors. Facebook did not take action on the same post.

The Twitter spokesman said decisions on the labels are made by a team of executives, including Sean Edgett, Twitter’s general counsel, and Del Harvey, the vice president of Trust and Safety. Dorsey is informed before actions are taken. The company’s curation team aggregates tweets on the disputed claims and writes a summary for a landing page.

The team, which includes former journalist­s, normally pulls together content in categories including Trending, News, Entertainm­ent, Sports and Fun.

Twitter, whose executives at one time referred to it as “the free speech wing of the free speech party,” has been tightening content policies for several years after recognizin­g that abuses had grown rampant.

Dorsey met privately with academics and senior journalist­s shortly after the 2016 US election, which former New York Times editor Bill Keller, who attended one meeting, called an “ahead-of-the-pack effort” to cope with fake news and abuse.

Critics say the company was slow to act after that, but it has accelerate­d its efforts in the last year.

In March, it debuted its “manipulate­d media” label on a video of Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee to take on Trump in the November 3 election, posted by the White House social media director.

Twitter’s content review operation is small relative to its peers, with about 1,500 people. Facebook has about 35,000 people working on “safety and security,” including 15,000 moderators, most of them contractor­s, although it also dwarfs Twitter in size: 2.4bn daily users compared to Twitter’s 166mn.

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