HOW’S THAT SPACE PROGRAM COMING ALONG? A meteor exploded over Earth with 10 times the energy of Hiroshima’s atomic bomb.
In 2015, we published an investigation on how exposures to a
solvent common in paint strippers -- called methylene chloride --
were linked to at least 56
accidental exposure deaths in the U.S. since 1980.
The European Union pulled methylene chloride paint strippers from general
use in 2011, but despite decades of evidence about the dangers, the U.S. didn't
follow suit, or even require better warnings.
Nearly four years later, the EPA has finally
issued a rule restricting retail sales of these products. When
the rule was proposed in January 2017, it cited our reporting multiple times.
For a while, the proposed ban languished. Safety advocates and victims'
families pressed for action. Some retailers voluntarily stopped selling paint
strippers containing the solvent.
Jamie Smith Hopkins first started reporting on this in 2015, beginning with a
tip and using public records to compile a record of deaths stretching back
decades.
The latest development in the story comes during Sunshine
Week, an annual
nationwide celebration of access to public information, and is an
example of how public records help us keep those in power accountable.
All week on social media, we've been spotlighting examples of our investigative
work. Here's the roundup:
- Susan
Ferriss dug into a database of government court settlements to find
Customs and Border Protection had been quietly settling lawsuits, a story
we partnered on with the
Washington Post:
- Our
look last April at the truth behind border claims, according
to U.S. Border Patrol data.
- Our
response to a reader question: How many people who have been deported have kids
who are citizens?
- Patrick
Malone and Jeffrey Smith's story with the Daily Beast on how the government
lost track of plutonium -- and its silence on the matter.
- Carrie
Levine's look into the ongoing saga of Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross'
failure to divest from stocks despite saying he did -- and her latest, a
look at why Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's financial disclosures
haven't been certified. (A fun twist: Last week, via FOIA, Levine got
emails showing how officials responded to a story she wrote on Ross'
financial conflicts two years ago).
- Liz
Whyte and Joe Yerardi's dive with NPR on drugmakers' influence on how
states decide which medicines are put on
the Medicaid preferred drug list.
The point: Public records are vital to investigative reporting,
to journalism, and to our mission statement: exposing betrayals of
the public trust by powerful interests.
UPDATES AND IMPACTS
BETO'S IN:
The former U.S. Senate candidate and member of Congress from Texas announced
his White House bid this week. During his Senate run, O'Rourke rejected money
from political action committees, but nevertheless shattered U.S.
Senate campaign fundraising records. 9 things to know about
Beto.
MNUCHIN'S ETHICS
TROUBLES: At Thursday's Senate Finance hearing on Capitol Hill,
Sen. Ron Wyden asked Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin about the issues raised
in Carrie Levine's scoop last week: Why hasn't the
White House's chief ethics watchdog certified Mnuchin’s annual financial
disclosure? Meanwhile, The New York Times, CNN, and other news
outlets credited her with breaking the story.
INVESTIGATIVE
MUST-READS
Several Boeing
737 Max 8 pilots in U.S. complained about suspected safety flaw (Dallas
Morning News)
Ex-VW Chief Knew
of Diesel Scheme Years Earlier Than He Admitted, S.E.C. Says (New York Times)
DOJ Probes
Whether Fugitive Financier Supplied Donation to Trump Re-Election Effort
(Wall Street Journal)
CENTER HAPPENINGS
IN
THE NEWS
Fox News,
MSNBC,
WBEN-930
The European Union pulled methylene chloride paint strippers from general use in 2011, but despite decades of evidence about the dangers, the U.S. didn't follow suit, or even require better warnings.
Nearly four years later, the EPA has finally issued a rule restricting retail sales of these products. When the rule was proposed in January 2017, it cited our reporting multiple times.
For a while, the proposed ban languished. Safety advocates and victims' families pressed for action. Some retailers voluntarily stopped selling paint strippers containing the solvent.
Jamie Smith Hopkins first started reporting on this in 2015, beginning with a tip and using public records to compile a record of deaths stretching back decades.
The latest development in the story comes during Sunshine Week, an annual nationwide celebration of access to public information, and is an example of how public records help us keep those in power accountable.
All week on social media, we've been spotlighting examples of our investigative work. Here's the roundup:
Two new health fact-checkers
When HealthNewsReview.org announced
it was shutting down in December, it went mostly unnoticed.
Almost nobody tweeted about the closure of the outlet, which had
been debunking bogus health claims for 13 years. An email to the IFCN listserv
highlighting HealthNewsReview’s demise got no responses. And the move went
uncovered by most major media outlets.
But HealthNewsReview was one of the few fact-checking projects
out there whose stated goal was to debunk false claims about health — and
it was doing so at a time when bogus articles, memes and videos promoting stuff
like anti-vaccine conspiracies were rampant on platforms like Facebook and
YouTube. Not to mention the lack of public service health journalism.
“There is a Grand Canyon-sized gap between the kind of
information that patients and consumers need and what they’re actually getting
in most health care news stories and PR news releases,” wrote Gary Schwitzer,
founder and publisher of HealthNewsReview, in
his goodbye column.
Now, two new fact-checking projects aimed specifically at debunking false claims about health have emerged — and they’re relying on crowdsourced expertise.
The first is HealthFeedback.org,
a fact-checking site that asks experts to review factual claims about health.
Launched in the fall, HealthFeedback is an outgrowth of ClimateFeedback.org,
a fact-checking project of the University of California at Merced that debunks
false claims about the climate, and annotates news articles about science to
highlight where they deviate from facts.
Each of the fact-checkers at HealthFeedback holds a doctorate
and has been recently published in a peer-reviewed journal, according
to its site. Scientists can apply to review claims for the site, which
publishes its work in the form of a ratings-free, in-depth fact check.
That process, in which verified scientists review scientific
claims online, is essentially elevated crowdsourcing. And HealthFeedback isn’t
the only platform to take that approach.
Last April, three scientists built a prototype for what would become Metafact. The idea was to get verified scientists to answer readers’ questions about health claims. Then, the platform would display the degree to which those experts reached a consensus about the question.
Last April, three scientists built a prototype for what would become Metafact. The idea was to get verified scientists to answer readers’ questions about health claims. Then, the platform would display the degree to which those experts reached a consensus about the question.
Since then, the platform has verified more than 11,000 experts
from 555 institutions around the world. Similar to HealthFeedback, experts have
to be scientists, medical doctors, engineers and researchers who have published
in a recent peer-reviewed journal, according
to Metafact’s site.
Metafact has answered questions ranging from “Is gluten
unhealthy?” (94 percent of experts said no) to “Is biological ageing
inevitable?” (72 percent said yes). Now it’s taken to Kickstarter
and Patreon
to fund the beta version of the platform, which will hire five part-time
science editors and create a membership program.
As a fact-checking method, crowdsourcing doesn’t have a long
history of success. Past Wikipedia-style efforts have typically struggled to
incentivize their users and build a community. But crowdsourcing fact checks
from experts who are certified in a specific subject matter could yield more
promising results — particularly if that work is amplified by partnering
with tech platforms.
...technology
- YouTube announced that it’s testing a new feature in India that displays fact checks alongside search results for sensitive topics, BuzzFeed News reported. The feature works by pulling relevant articles from the Schema.org ClaimReview markup, which is essentially a few lines of code that fact-checkers embed in their stories to get them picked up by Google. YouTube told Daniel that it plans to roll the feature out to new countries in 2019.
- The Verge reported that Facebook has a plan to remove groups and pages that spread anti-vaccine misinformation from its recommendations — which have been proven to shape users’ beliefs. Facebook will not remove such groups and pages outright, as it does with false accounts. The move comes after weeks of pressure from both the public and American lawmakers for the company to do something about antivaxxer content, which is popular worldwide.
- Also jumping on the anti-anti-vaccine bandwagon, Amazon this week announced that it had removed books promoting autism cures and antivaxxer propaganda. NBC News reported that the move came after a report from Wired that found the platform had hosted medically dubious books offering bogus cures for a variety of diseases.
...politics
- PEN America has released a report on how misinformation tactics are being normalized as campaign strategies as the United States gears up for another presidential election in 2020. PEN found that among the biggest threats are micro-targeting and fake accounts. The report also recommends that tech platforms voluntarily take up some combination of human and automated moderation to weed out bogus content.
- Experts see a shift in how Russian internet trolls are seeking to disrupt the 2020 elections. To get around protections put in place by social media companies to find fake content, they're using fake accounts to amplify existing content, Bloomberg reports. Also in Russia, the government has banned the sharing of "false information of public interest, shared under the guise of fake news," the BBC reported.
- Inspired by The Washington Post Fact Checker’s ongoing guide to all of President Donald Trump’s false or misleading statements, Aos Fatos has launched a running tally of similar falsities from Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro. Meanwhile, on CNN, Victor Blackwell is using gumballs to visualize how many false claims Trump has made.
...the future of news
- If an artificial intelligence language model can be used to write stories, could it also be used to detect non-human written ones? Maybe, according to MIT’s Technology Review, though one rigorous test gave reason for doubt. Meanwhile, a joint initiative of MIT and Harvard gave $275,000 to projects that are using AI to combat misinformation.
- Much ado has been made about Facebook’s partnership with fact-checking outlets. And while fact checks struggle to scale on the platform, the project has at least changed the way that misinformation is produced. Conversely, it’s changed the way that fact-checkers approach satire vs. misinformation.
- Remember last week when we said that Facebook’s pivot to privacy and encryption could spell bad news for those wishing to counter misinformation? Politico put those concerns into words, writing that encrypting everyone’s messages “will undermine efforts worldwide to tackle misinformation.”
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.
Agência
Lupa: "It
is false that this reporter has said that he intends to 'ruin Flávio Bolsonaro
and the government'" (Fact: 23.6K engagements // Fake: 78.6K
engagements)
2.
Les
Décodeurs: "Female
crew, film turbulence, fake photos: three intox on Ethiopian Airlines
crash" (Fact: 4.4K engagements // Fake: 1.8K engagements)
3.
Factcheck.org:
"Meme
Fabricates Ocasio-Cortez Firing" (Fact: 3.3K engagements // Fake: 372
engagements)
4.
Faktisk:
"No,
MDG will not replace disabled private cars with buses" (Fact: 1K
engagements // Fake: 28.2K engagements)
5.
Boom
Live: "Viral
Posts Falsely Claim Men Who Attacked Kashmiris Are Congress, SP Members"
(Fact: 363 engagements // Fake: 545 engagements)
Not long after the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, a video appeared on Facebook that purportedly showed passengers and crew members inside the plane’s cabin before its demise. It’s believable enough — people are wearing oxygen masks and babies are crying. But, thanks to Africa Check, we know it wasn’t a video of the Boeing 737 Max 8 moments before it crashed.
What we liked: Verification experts can often use geolocation tools to indicate
whether a video was shot at a specific location, but that was obviously not an
option in this case. Africa Check debunked the video in two ways — by
consulting experts and through crowdsourcing.
First, it pointed out that oxygen masks would not have deployed
until the plane climbed to a certain altitude, which according to records,
Flight 302 never hit.
Second, it used crowdsourcing on Twitter to further validate its
conclusion. Respondents, including a defense analyst, pointed out that the
plane in the video was a double-aisled aircraft, whereas the Max 8 has a single
aisle.
The fact-checker also noted a tweet pointing out that the plane
in the video appears to be flying at night, whereas Flight 302 was traveling in
the morning.
1.
The
IFCN is
hiring its first-ever intern this summer! The program runs 10 weeks and
pays $10,000. Apply
by March 30. Speaking of jobs, Poynter is
hiring for several other positions — including two multimedia
reporters who will fact-check misinformation on Instagram for MediaWise.
2.
Big
news: Former IFCN director Alexios Mantzarlis has
a new job at TED! He has accepted a fellowship to spend about a year
developing a way for the public to weigh in on information quality on digital
platforms.
3.
Full
Fact is
also hiring! The British fact-checking outlet is looking for a journalist
to join their growing team. Apply by March 18.
4.
WhatsApp
is
*finally* testing a feature that lets users conduct a reverse Google image
search within the app.
5.
In
Indonesia, so-called “buzzer” teams are
using fake social media profiles to drum up hype and promote propaganda
supporting both presidential candidates.
6.
Joy
Behar, host of ABC’s “The View,” seemed
to entertain a conspiracy theory that Melania Trump had a body double
during the president and first lady’s recent trip to a tornado-stricken region
in Alabama. The White House quickly
answered, and the president blamed
the mainstream media, calling them “fake news.”
7.
Time’s
interview with internet pioneer Tim Berners-Lee touches on fake news and
misinformation, as well as the web’s evolution in the 30 years since his
original vision.
8.
It’s
not news that Russian (Soviet, in this case) disinformation existed before the
Internet, but a 1982 TV Guide article dug
up by CNN shows that pre-web strategies were not too different from today’s.
9.
Snopes
has
exempted itself from the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine. 🤔
10. Christiaan Triebert, formerly a digital
investigator and trainer at Bellingcat, has
joined The New York Times’ visual investigations unit.
The Recorder (Law.com / paywall] via free access on Yahoo} “Are rules that guard against forged or tampered evidence enough to prevent deepfake videos from making their way into court cases? …If you follow technology, it’s likely you’re in a panic over deepfakes—altered videos that employ artificial intelligence and are nearly impossible to detect. Or else you’re over it already. For lawyers, a better course may lie somewhere in between. We asked Riana Pfefferkorn, associate director of surveillance and cybersecurity at Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society, to explain (sans the alarmist rhetoric) why deepfakes should probably be on your radar….”