Facebook is partnering up with Full Fact, a British charitable organization that focuses on fact-checking, to get rid of fake news in the UK, the company announced Friday.
This is a continuation of Facebook's efforts to combat fake news, which the company ramped up after the 2016 election, but it's the first time the company has launched such an initiative in the UK.
SEE ALSO: Facebook's Privacy DisasterThis is how it'll work: Facebook users in the UK will be able to flag potentially misleading content. Then, Full Fact's fact-checkers will take over and check the content for accuracy, rating it as true, false or a mix of both.
"Full Fact will focus on reviewing and rating misinformation which carries the most potential for harming people’s safety or undermining democratic processes – such as dangerous cancer ‘cures’, false stories spreading after terror attacks or fake content about how to vote ahead of elections," Facebook said in a press release.
Content that was flagged as false will appear lower in Facebook's News Feed, and users will see whether the content they're sharing was false or not, but Facebook will not stop them from sharing it if they choose to do so.
Facebook also notes that Full Fact will only review content that's presented as fact-based reporting, while ignoring other types of content such as opinion or satire.
The news comes a few weeks after a Guardian report (to which Facebook replied here) on Facebook's third-party fact-checking program. The report claimed the program is in "disarray," and that the company prioritized flagging misinformation which affected its advertisers (Facebook said this was untrue).
Furthermore, some of Facebook's third-party fact-checkers complained in 2017 that they don't have access to data that would tell them whether the program is working or not.
The partnership with Full Fact is structured in a way as to overcome these issues. Facebook says it will have "no control over what Full Fact chooses to check, what its fact-checkers write and what rating they give." Furthermore, Full Fact's fact-checks will automatically be uploaded to Facebook, without any Facebook staff member seeing or approving it before it goes live.
Also, Full Fact will produce quarterly reports to assess how well the program is working.
文章
5
浏览
52
获赞
81273
When SSD Performance Goes Awry
An unfortunate tale about Samsung's SSD 840 read performance degradationAn avalanche of reports emerHow to sign up for Amazon Prime ahead of Prime Day 2023
Amazon Prime Day is finally upon us and exciting deals await on electronics, clothes, makeup and morNintendo Switch successor could launch next year
Don't look now, but the Nintendo Switch is more than six years old.That's relevant because, in the wStephen King is trolling Elon Musk over Twitter's name change
Stephen King has never been one to hide his feelings on Twitter, and it doesn't look like he's aboutGoogle now has a much better way to alert you to critical security issues
If someone's hacking into your account, getting an email about it might not do much good; by the timWoman of Steel
Taylor Michael ,September 18, 2024 Woman oI Have Secrets
Dale Peck ,October 30, 2024 I Have SecretsTikTok to launch e
Soon you will be able to buy products directly from TikTok. The social media company reportedly planYouTuber lets followers redecorate his bedroom via Twitter bot
Tech vlogger Michael Reeves doesn't know much about interior design, so he's letting his followers dGhosts in the Mirror
Stephen Piccarella ,November 12, 2024 GhosGovernment scientists are caught between new gag order and their own ethics policies
Scientists working for the U.S. government found themselves facing a bit of a contradiction on MondaIllegitimate Concerns?
Kevin Okoth ,November 7, 2024 IllegitimateThe curse of incomplete makeup removal in skincare videos comes for Millie Bobby Brown
People are convinced that Millie Bobby Brown didn't wash her face correctly in a recent video becausHere's how you can return Amazon packages in 2023
Amazon provides a pretty irresistible shopping experience through its speedy shipping (among other PElon Musk to replace the Twitter bird with an X
Elon Musk is once again making a useless change, and Twitter will no longer be known by its alias, "