Thursday, November 23, 2017

Fact Czeching Truth Matters

Story image for slovak from World Policy Institute (blog)

How Fake News Helped Slovak Extremists Become Reality


It looked like yet more evidence of the rising clout of one of Slovakia'smost prominent far-right politicians when an opinion poll emerged ...

Murdoch, Sinclair, the Kochs and growing consolidation




Nov 17


I’m in Warwick, Queensland, to celebrate a centenary of Federal policing in Australia. Did you know it all began when an egg knocked off the hat of Prime Minister Billy Hughes at a rally here in 1917?

ATO accused of over-stepping with new staff social media policy



French firm Veolia saves half a billion euros through aggressive tax management
sven-giegold, 27/10/17. The report, written by the independent auditor and consultant Jean Michel Matt, shows how the company consolidated losses from various French subsidiaries under one fiscal unit to reduce its tax liabilities.



This week Uber fired its chief security officer and one of his deputies. The reason? They had concealed a massive security breach for more than one year. And that's not all: in order to convince the hackers to delete the information on 57 million peoplethe security officers paid the hackers $100,000.


At the time of the incident, Uber was negotiating with U.S. regulators investigating separate claims of privacy violations. Uber now says it had a legal obligation to report the hack to regulators and to drivers whose license numbers were taken. Instead, the company paid hackers to delete the data and keep the breach quiet. Uber said it believes the information was never used but declined to disclose the identities of the attackers.




The Trust Project is an international consortium of news organizations collaborating to use transparency to build a more trustworthy and trusted press. Led by award-winning journalist Sally Lehrman, it is hosted by Santa Clara University’s Markkula Center for Applied Ethics. Search engines and social media platforms, which have become important news distributors, are participating as external partners. The Trust Project applies a user-centered design process. We gathered dozens of in-depth interviews with a diverse spectrum of public voices. Then, working with these, news executives identified and designed a system of “Trust Indicators,” or disclosures about the news outlet, author, and commitments behind a story, to make it easy for the public to identify the quality of news. Digital platforms, such as Google, Facebook and Bing, will be able to use machine-readable signals from the Trust Indicators to surface quality news to their users…”


What happened to Paul Horner's fake news sites?
Quote of the week
Since he died seven weeks ago, at least 20 of Paul Horner's fake news websites have gone down, a Poynter analysis found. (The site information is available in this shared document). While the infamous misinformation creator's death is no longer in question — despite initial media doubts and Twitter conspiracies — his legacy is.

'The face of fake news'

"Two things are clear. First and most importantly, there will continue to be creative new uses to these platforms in ways that we cannot predict. Countries and organizations that we view as our adversaries see these platforms as our Achilles' heel. ...The old attack vectors of fake news and buying ads will be replaced by new attack vectors.”  — Notre Dame professor TImothy Carone on CNBC

Congressional hearings on misinformation are bringing back bad memories for a Chicago woman. A photo of her appeared (without her permission) in a fake 2016 campaign ad that's making the rounds again as committee members study social media's sketchy role in the election.

What have fact-checkers learned after a year of Trump?
It's been a year since Donald Trump became president of the United States. Fact-checkers from PolitiFact, The Washington Post and FactCheck.org reflect on what they've learned by covering his administration.

Sebastian Gorka isn't a PolitiFact fan
The former White House counter terrorism adviser and Breitbart editor gave staff writer Josh Gillin's comment request the cold shoulder.

Sebastian Gorka got back to me about his Pants on Fire claims about@jaketapperpic.twitter.com/Ry4LvbO2zW
— Joshua Gillin (@jpgillin) November 3, 2017
Facebook's fact-checking partnership isn't foolproof
Mic reports a social media strategist made $20,000 from an article with a fake quote in the headline before Snopes flagged it and it was taken down. A Facebook spokesperson said it commonly takes more than three days to remove fake news stories.
Power to the (wrong) people
Africa's first Nobel laureate for literature prefers paper over computers and doesn't use Twitter or Facebook. But the 83-year-old has some wise words about "fake news," technology and their weaponization against democracy. 
What journalists get wrong about 'fake news'
Writing for the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, Tamar Wilner says journalists must learn what "fake news" really is and then accept it as their own problem to fix.  
New shooting, new round of misinformation
After Sunday's shooting in a Texas church, a congressman fell for a recurrent hoax and things only got worse after that. ... BuzzFeed and fact-checkers in Texas had their hands full trying to keep misinformation from spreading during the horrific church shootings last week. 
Can 'citizen investigators' save us? 
A Massachusetts researcher suggests that teaching people about "formal argumentation" and then letting them loose to verify statements on social media could be a key to fighting misinformation. Read about his theory on The Conversation
Investigator GIF
How fact-checking works
In advance of the election season, the Conversation AU is asking readers what facts should be checked and offers a one-minute fact-checking tutorial.
Fact-checking Kenya's election and rerun
Poynter's Daniel Funke spoke with Eric Mugendi of PesaCheck about the types of hoaxes fact-checkers saw during Kenya's contested August election and subsequent rerun. Spoiler alert: It got worse as time went on.
Fishy claims
A fake narrative about Trump and fish food spread during his visit to Japan. But the full video told another story.
Facebook's (really) unpopular test
A Facebook experiment in which it promoted comments containing the word "fake" to the top of news feeds was criticized by many users. As one freelance PR consultant put it: "My Facebook feed has become like some awful Orwellian doublethink experiment."
The Twitter star that wasn't
ICYMI, The Daily Beast has a must read on "Jenna Abrams." (Now is a good moment to bookmark this Henk van Ess decalogue to bust fake tweeters.)
Jenna Abrams GIF
(GIF by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast)
14 quick fact-checking links
(1) An interview with former Reagan adviser Bruce Bartlett about his new book, "The Truth Matters."  (2) Could shareholders be more effective than Congress in stopping fake news? (3) "Fake news" unfortunately is the word of the year. (4) Here are the seven reasons that misinformation goes viral.  (5) Newsweek blasts Lara Trump for spreading misinformation on Twitter and debunks an old, viral claim. (6A bunch of people had to debunk "the very bad day" rumor last week. (7A radio host and a producer explain how they debunk rumors on their show. (9) tree octopus teaches kids about misinformation on the Internet. (10) Austrian journalist and author Ingrid Brodnig collected examples of misinformation that emerged during the German election and categorized it following First Draft's taxonomy. (11) Vox sat down with the author of a forthcoming book on misinformation. (12) A sober fact check from Africa Check. (13) Italian daily Il Fatto Quotidiano asked readers what they wanted to see more of, and fact-checking was one of the answers. (14) Full Fact looks at sexual violence stats in the U.K.