‘A person cannot live without a steady faith in something indestructible within him.’ Kafka’s das Unzerstörbare… Isn’t that what you felt that day in the chapel, when you were in the hole, when you’d hit bottom? A power that made you both meaningless and meaningful, before which you were neither I nor he. The impersonal light through the stained-glass window. Your smallness and the greatness of God. Room to breathe. A sense of dignity.
Indestructible, that’s as good a word as any. You sense it sometimes, like today. You can come to it or not, fall away from it and return, it remains, at least as an inkling. Unzerstörbar: there’s hope in that word, which sounds so harsh in German.
China has recruited the services of former police detectives in Australia and other Western countries to help it recover millions of dollars in alleged "hot money" taken out of the country.
Young Liberals sacked from government over Tinder scandal
Two Young Liberals suspended from the party over a Tinder scandal have been sacked from their government jobs.
ROYAL COMMISSION MOTION PASSES
After all the political shenanigans, the motion calling for a royal commission into the abuse of disabled people has passed on the voices.
EVIDENCE MAY HAVE BEEN DESTROYED
The AFP has confirmed that evidence in its investigation into Michaelia Cash’s office may have been destroyed.
“Did you find any evidence that evidence relating to the leak may have been destroyed,” Labor Senator Murray Watt asked during Senate Estimates.
“We understood that could have been the case in some instances, yes,” the AFP’s Leanne Close replied.
“Involving ministerial staff?” Mr Watt pressed.
“It’s impossible for me to speculate today who that may or may not have been. I also did not hear the evidence in the trial,” she said.
Last week the Federal Court heard Ms Cash’s former media adviser David De Garis had deleted text messages.
Peter Dutton had 'no sight' of Manus contractor Paladin
Labor issues please explain over Paladin's $420m Manus contract ...
New York Times op-ed: Abolish Billionaires, by Farhad Manjoo:
Last fall, Tom Scocca, editor of the essential blog Hmm Daily, wrote a tiny, searing post that has been rattling around my head ever since.
“Some ideas about how to make the world better require careful, nuanced thinking about how best to balance competing interests,” he began. “Others don’t: Billionaires are bad. We should presumptively get rid of billionaires. All of them.”
Mr. Scocca — a longtime writer at Gawker until that site was muffled by a billionaire — offered a straightforward argument for kneecapping the wealthiest among us. A billion dollars is wildly more than anyone needs, even accounting for life’s most excessive lavishes. It’s far more than anyone might reasonably claim to deserve, however much he believes he has contributed to society.
The Personal Toll of Whistle-Blowing New Yorker
So long, fact-checkers
Friday is Alexios Mantzarlis’ last day
as IFCN Director, so we’ll let him have the top of the newsletter this week.
(He also got cake.) Alexios will be succeeded by Baybars
Örsek, formerly the director of Turkish fact-checking site Doğruluk
Payı. Cristina Tardáguila,
the director of Brazilian fact-checking wire Agência Lupa, will also be joining
the IFCN as associate director.
When I started as director of the International Fact-Checking Network in September 2015, there was very little there to direct. The idea was that I’d run the annual Global Fact conference and help the world’s fact-checkers exchange best practices. That was about it.
When I started as director of the International Fact-Checking Network in September 2015, there was very little there to direct. The idea was that I’d run the annual Global Fact conference and help the world’s fact-checkers exchange best practices. That was about it.
One
of the only publications to cover my hire was the conspiracy-driven site
Voltaire Network. “The CIA invests in journalism,” it headlined.
I should have taken that as a sign of things to come.
Even
in the United States, where fact-checking had deepest roots at the time, the
public somewhat nonsensically expressed
high favorability toward, but low familiarity with, the format. I had to
spend a lot of time explaining what exactly I meant by fact-checking (I
have a Venn diagram now).
Things
changed. In the following years, the number of fact-checking projects globally almost
tripled and they gained new roles vis-à-vis Facebook,
Google
and other
major information platforms. Fact-checking became
the object of coordinated trolling and attacks.
If
anything, we went from too little attention in fact-checking to too much.
Policymakers and foundations suddenly decided that fact-checking was the silver
bullet against online disinformation. Techno-utopian projects emerged to meet
this surge in demand for solutions. I’m concerned that absurdly high
expectations will be disappointed and a funding bubble might pop, dragging good
projects down along with everyone else.
Fact-checkers
remain remarkably
understaffed and underfinanced, even for the standards of the journalism
industry. Their reaction to crumbling trust was to commit to greater
transparency. The code
of principles that the IFCN oversees has been a significant step in the
right direction, even if it has been trumpeted and financed less than other
news credibility endeavors.
Even
were the code implemented perfectly, which it is not, I don’t think we know
that greater transparency leads to greater trust. Fact-checking is built on a
reference to authority — not the authority of its authors, but that of their
sources. While transparency is worth pursuing as a end in itself, we need to do
a lot more work to understand what makes most people trust that a source of
fact is an actual authority in the field being fact-checked.
I
don’t mean for any of this to sound too pessimistic. But — self-plagiarism
alert — fact-checkers are no longer a fresh-faced journalistic reform movement;
they are wrinkly arbiters of a take-no-prisoners war for the future of the
internet. Greater impact requires more accountability.
Some
undeniably good things have happened since 2015. Fact-checkers became a lot
smarter about serving their audiences. My current fact-checking crush is
Maldito Bulo, which harnesses its community through WhatsApp, launched smart
new tools like an image search bar for doctored photos and beat
hoaxers’ reach on Twitter. I will also always have a special place for
Julien Pain’s effort to bring
debunking to the streets. I could write 1,000 more words on other promising
innovations.
We
learned quite a bit more about the effects of fact-checking, and that, too, is
encouraging. On average, in U.S.-based studies, people
are willing to change their minds when corrected. A major, real-life test
coordinated by the IFCN should soon yield actionable knowledge on how headlines
affect readers’ understanding and acceptance of fact checks.
We
also learned valuable lessons about dealing with the platforms. The first is
that coordination matters. There’s a reason that Facebook turned to
IFCN-verified fact-checkers to flag misinformation on the platform — we had the
infrastructure to mobilize as a group and present a
united front.
The
other lesson is that scale matters: Despite continuous nagging, we’ve been
unable to get Facebook to share data about this partnership with the public in
any meaningful manner. Theories about platform reform vary dramatically from
revolution and regulation to patience and persuasion. Regardless of your
preferences, fixing the challenge of online disinformation will have to factor
in this imbalance of power.
Here
too, I think fact-checking has a role to play. The discussion about the
responsibilities of platforms to fight misinformation has been hampered by a
lack of facts — or an ignorance of them. So keep on fighting the good fight,
fact-checkers.
... technology
- A few weeks ago, YouTube announced that it would stop recommending some conspiracy theory videos in its recommendation algorithm. This week, someone who worked on building that algorithm explained on Twitter why the move is so significant. At the same time, Motherboard wrote that the way YouTube prioritizes audience feedback provides a structural imperative for creators to peddle misinformation.
- WhatsApp said that it’s deleting 2 million accounts per month as part of its ongoing efforts to combat misinformation and spam on the messaging app. The data came out in a white paper published in India, where the government has pressed WhatsApp to be more transparent and accountable for the killings that have resulted from rumors on the platform.
- Speaking of India, Facebook added five new fact-checking partners in the country this week ahead of a May election. The news came on the heels of several high-profile exits from the partnership, including Snopes and ABC News, and a little before the AFP and Full Fact gave mostly positive reviews to Digiday. Meanwhile, Twitter is also reportedly trying to amp up its anti-misinformation efforts ahead of the election.
... politics
- President Trump twice this week criticized fact-checkers. First he did so in a tweet, and next at a political rally in El Paso. There, he called them “some of the most dishonest people in media,” falsely saying they didn’t check Barack Obama’s inaccurate claims about the Affordable Care Act. Actually, they did, said Factcheck.org.
- At least 43 countries around the world have taken action against online misinformation, according to Daniel’s updated guide. New to the list: Canada, Côte d’Ivoire, Thailand and Vietnam. At the same time, the Los Angeles Times reported that countries in Asia are increasingly using misinformation as a means to exercise control over social media use.
- Conspiracy theorists are falsely insisting that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is dead. The false claim seems to have originated on 4chan message boards that houses believers in the QAnon conspiracy theory, which posits that the U.S. government has been secretly investigating Democrats and the Justice Department will soon reveal compromising information about Hillary Clinton.
... the future of news
- In 2018, we saw an increase in the number of collaborative verification projects — and it seems that growth is continuing into 2019. A new Philippine initiative called Tsek.ph launched this week to fact-check this year’s midterm elections. That project comes on the heels of CrossCheck Nigeria, which will no doubt be busy debunking rumors about this weekend’s general election.
- As misinformation on WhatsApp becomes a greater threat around the world, the company has taken a few baby steps to contain the virality of messages. But in a Medium post published at the end of January, Aviv Ovadya outlined and expanded upon a proposal that would create a list of hoaxes users could reference that draws upon work from independent fact-checkers.
- At the IFCN, we’re generally skeptical of the immediate impact of deepfake videos. But Wired reported that a new tool, which runs in the background while a video is recorded, could help distinguish authentic from tampered video. Yes, it relies on blockchain technology (insert groan here), but it reminds us of Truepic, a similarly promising tool that makes it easier for people to prove their photos are authentic from their inception.
Each week, we analyze five of the top-performing fact checks on
Facebook to see how their reach compared to the hoaxes they debunked. Here
are this week’s numbers.
1.
Factcheck.org:
‘False
Claim About Ocasio-Cortez’s “Demand”’ (Fact: 4.7K engagements // Fake: 371)
2.
Rappler:
‘MISLEADING:
Manila Bay “resort,” “soon-to-be-beach” photos’ (Fact: 4.5K engagements //
Fake: 32.5K engagements)
3.
AFP:
‘“Yellow
Vests”: decontextualized photos to criticize Macron’ (Fact: 2.0K
engagements // Fake: 5.3K engagements)
4.
PolitiFact:
‘No,
courts did not “quietly confirm” MMR vaccine causes autism’ (Fact: 1.6K
engagements // Fake: 60 engagements)
5.
Teyit:
‘The
claim that the photo shows Atatürk together with a wolf dog’ (Fact: 853
engagements // Fake: 4.8K engagements)
Let’s go back to that fact check from Teyit.
On Jan. 28, a Facebook user posted a black-and-white photo claiming to show former Turkish president Mustafa Kemal Atatürk with a dog. The photo was shared by an Atatürk fan page and got thousands of engagements. Teyit debunked the photo, saying the original photo depicted Adolf Hitler with his dog Blondi — and that Atatürk was photoshopped into it.
Teyit figured out the photo was manipulated by doing a reverse image search on the photo using RevEye. That took the site to Russian search engine Yandex, where fact-checkers found visually similar photos from Getty Images that depicted Hitler, not Atatürk. Then they found other photos of Hitler with his German shepherd, Blondi, and compared them to the hoax. It was the same dog.
Finally, Teyit traced
the photo of Atatürk in the photoshopped image to a trip the leader took Izmit,
Turkey, in summer 1922. Plus, Atatürk’s dog Foks didn’t look anything like
Blondi.
What we liked: It didn’t get the most engagement among the fact checks we
analyzed for Fact vs. Fake (on the contrary, the hoax it debunked got five
times more Facebook engagements), but this is a smart fact check. Teyit
methodically explained to readers the origin of each component of the
manipulated photo, and the use of Yandex was smart and effective. And, as we
constantly advise journalists to do at Poynter, Teyit got the names of the
dogs (plural!).
1.
Former
Snopes managing editor Brooke Binkowski penned
an op-ed for BuzzFeed News in which she criticized Facebook’s fact-checking
project.
2.
Poynter
is hosting a webinar March 20 on how to use WhatsApp to fight misinformation. Sign
up today.
3.
BuzzFeed
and the Toronto Star are collaborating
on a project to cover misinformation in advance of Canada’s general election
this year.
4.
Public
health officials in the U.K. are calling
on Facebook to do something about closed groups that spread
anti-vaccination messages.
5.
Adding
to its repertoire of movie fact-checks, PolitiFact this week offered checks of
two Academy Award-nominated films: “Vice”
and “Green
Book.” In August it checked “BlacKkKlansman.”
Speaking of Best Picture nominees, Rolling Stone last year fact-checked “Bohemian
Rhapsody.”
6.
More
Jill Abramson fallout: Poynter’s Kelly McBride wrote
that the former New York Times’s editor’s answers to charges of plagiarism in a
new book about truth could hurt all of journalism. McBride was also asked about
the issue in a broadcast of NPR's "1A" from St. Petersburg,
Florida, an episode
dedicated to fact-checking.
7.
Fake
photos have sparked reprisal killings in Nigeria,
where fact-checkers are doing their best to discredit false information
circulating online.
8.
In
the U.K., The
Times investigated the origin of a fake news website that peddled
propaganda using the BBC’s branding. Spoiler: The reporter found links to
Macedonia.
9.
Amazon
is
selling hundreds of T-shirts that promote conspiracy theories.
10.
Speaking
of Amazon, in Queens, N.Y., residents who support the company’s move
to bring a second headquarters to Long Island City say they are fighting a ground
war against misinformation surrounding the plans.