The Citizen (KZN)

Facebook acts on fake news

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Joining third-party fact-checking programmes in Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, Cameroon and Senegal, Facebook recently announced the expansion of its third-party fact-checking programme to 10 additional African countries.

In partnershi­p with Agence France-Presse (AFP), the France 24 Observers, Pesa Check and Dubawa, this programme forms part of its work in helping assess the accuracy and quality of news people find on Facebook.

Working with a network of fact-checking organisati­ons, certified by the non-partisan Internatio­nal Fact-Checking Network, third-party fact-checking will now be available in Ethiopia, Zambia, Somalia and Burkina Faso through AFP, Uganda and Tanzania through both Pesa Check and AFP, Democratic Republic of Congo and Cote d’Ivoire through the France 24 Observers and AFP, Guinea Conakry through the France 24 Observers, and Ghana through Dubawa.

Feedback from the Facebook community is one of many signals Facebook uses to raise potentiall­y false stories to fact-checkers for review. Local articles will be fact-checked alongside the verificati­on of photos and videos.

“If one of our fact-checking partners identifies a story as false, Facebook will show it lower in news feed, reducing its distributi­on,” said Kojo Boakye, Facebook head of Public Policy, Africa.

“The expansion of third-party fact-checking to now cover 15 countries in a little over a year shows firsthand our commitment and dedication to the continent, alongside our recent local language expansion as part of this programme.

“Taking steps to help tackle false news on Facebook is a responsibi­lity we take seriously, we know misinforma­tion is a problem, and these are important steps in continuing to address this issue. We know that third-party fact-checking alone is not the solution, it is one of many initiative­s we are investing in to help to improve the quality of informatio­n people see on Facebook.”

When third-party fact-checkers fact-check a news story, Facebook will show these in related articles in news feed. Page admins and people on Facebook will also receive notificati­ons if they try to share a story or have shared one in the past that’s been determined to be false, empowering people to decide for themselves what to read, trust and share.

– Citizen reporter

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