The Denver Post

Facebook, YouTube erred in censoring COVID-19 “misinforma­tion”

- By Faye Flam Faye Flam is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist and host of the podcast “Follow the Science.”

Labelling misinforma­tion online is doing more harm than good. The possibilit­y that COVID-19 came from a lab accident is just the latest example. Social media companies tried to suppress any discussion of it for months. But why? There’s no strong evidence against it, and evidence for other theories is still inconclusi­ve. Pathogens have escaped from labs many times, and people have died as a result.

Social media fact-checkers don’t have any special knowledge or ability to sort fact from misinforma­tion. What they have is extraordin­ary power to shape what people believe. And stifling ideas can backfire if it leads people to believe there’s a “real story” that is being suppressed.

Misinforma­tion is dangerous. It can keep people from getting lifesaving medical treatments, including vaccines. But flagging it doesn’t necessaril­y solve the problem. It’s much better to provide additional informatio­n than to censor informatio­n.

Part of the problem is that people think they know misinforma­tion when they see it. And those most confident of their ability to spot it may be least aware of their own biases. That includes the fact-checking industry within the mainstream media, who were caught removing earlier posts on the lab leak theory, as well as social media “fact checkers” who aren’t accountabl­e to the public.

Earlier this year, I interviewe­d physician and medical podcaster Roger Seheult who said that he was censored by YouTube for discussing the clinical trials of hydroxychl­oroquine and Ivermectin as potential Covid-19 treatments. No wonder so many people still believe these are the cures “they” don’t want you to know about. Much better would be an open discussion of the clinical trial process.

Even without the power of censorship, social media culture encourages the facile labelling of ideas and people as a way of dismissing them — it’s easy to call people deniers because they question prevailing wisdom.

Of course, there are ideas that are very unlikely to be true. These generally involve elaborate conspiraci­es or a complete overhaul in our understand­ing of the universe. Or, like cold fusion and the vaccine-autism theory, they’ve been tested and debunked multiple times by investigat­ors.

I discussed the new interest in the lab leak with another science journalist who was interested in why so many reporters are still treating the natural spillover hypothesis as the only possibilit­y. We agreed this isn’t like the connection between carbon emissions and climate change, where there’s a scientific consensus based on years of research. Here, even if a few scientists favored the natural spillover early on, the question is still open.

Last year, some scientists rightly objected that accusing any lab of causing a worldwide pandemic is a serious charge and one shouldn’t be made on the basis of proximity alone. That doesn’t mean we should ignore the possibilit­y, or assume that some other equally unproven idea is right.

And the lab leak idea got conflated in some people’s minds with conspiracy theories that the virus was deliberate­ly created and released for population control or some other nefarious agenda. But a lab leak could have involved a perfectly natural virus that a scientist collected, or virus that was altered in some well-intentione­d attempt to understand it.

Writing in his blog, journalist and Bloomberg contributo­r Matthew Yglesias calls it a media fiasco. “[T]he mainstream press … got way over their skis in terms of discourse-policing.” He admits he Tweeted his disapprova­l of a thoughtful, well-written New York Magazine piece that helped revive the lab leak debate.

The author — novelist Nicholson Baker — didn’t claim any smoking gun, but made a convincing case that the issue was still open. A Medium piece by former Times writer Nicholas Wade added little to what Baker said, but came at a time when the pubic was ready to reconsider. A recent Vanity Fair account details how the issue was suppressed inside the U.S. government.

Looking back, there really wasn’t that much new news to report. Very little new evidence has been uncovered over the last year. The pandemic’s origin is still unknown. The fiasco was the media’s propagatio­n of the lie that the issue was settled and that anyone questionin­g it might be deemed a conspiracy theorist.

And maybe the intentions of the Facebook fact checkers were good. If there was magical way to identify misinforma­tion, then social media platforms could do more to refrain from spreading it. Suppressin­g ideas they don’t like isn’t the way.

Yesterday I had a long talk with someone who volunteers at a girls’ school in India, and she said she’d been in contact with some students who expressed fear of Covid vaccines, even though their neighborho­od has been ravaged by the pandemic. When she gave them additional informatio­n, about relatively greater danger of the disease, they chose to get vaccinated.

What helped was not taking away informatio­n but giving people additional informatio­n. Censoring informatio­n — or what one deems “misinforma­tion” — isn’t as helpful as it seems. The best we can do is keep questionin­g, and give people the most complete story we can.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States