KRUISER: It’s Official: Selfies Are More Dangerous Than Sharks.
GI Suicide: Maybe It’s The Job? Lobelog (original)
'Australia is failing to combat dirty money entering the property market' - SBS
Meet some of Australia's most high-profile legal pests via CJ
Meet some of Australia's most high-profile legal pests via CJ
… Social Media and Other Diseases
Social media encourages reactions to content far more than it encourages actual content, and the companies' algorithms promote posts that cause the audience reaction of "likes" and "shares." As the algorithms for deciding which to promote grow more sophisticated and more hidden from users, the super-virus grows stronger. "Social media not only makes informed debate more difficult on their platforms," Reynolds argues, but also "rewires people's brains in such a fashion as to make such debate more difficult everywhere else."
Download the press release: Disinformation in Society – Press Release
Download the slides: 2019 IPR Disinformation in Society Report – Shareable Slides
Download social graphics: False News is a Problem, President Trump Key Findings and Disinformation Culprits
Howdy
from Cape Town!
This
week, the IFCN traveled to South Africa for our
sixth annual Global Fact-Checking Summit. During the three-day event
— the
largest yet — journalists, technology companies, nonprofits and startups
from around the world are mingling to discuss the possibilities and obstacles
facing the future of fact-checking.
What
are those obstacles? It depends on who you ask.
During
the show and tell sessions on Wednesday morning, most fact-checkers talked
about how they’re trying to scale their work and reach new audiences.
(Poynter-owned)
PolitiFact demoed “What the Fact,” a
TV show on Newsy on which editors fact-check a variety of political
statements. Chequeado, from Argentina, showed off Chequeabot, an
automated system that automatically sends the newsroom fact-checkable
claims from the media. Lead Stories, which operates in the United States and
Europe, walked participants through a
script that automatically publishes YouTube videos based on its fact
checks.
The
aim of these projects is somewhat obvious. While prolific for their relatively
small newsroom size, and in spite of record
audiences in recent years, fact-checkers still struggle
to contain the spread of misinformation and find
new readers online.
The
question of scale is a big one for fact-checkers — and tools like
Chequeabot and video-generating scripts are just a couple of potential solutions.
But for other fact-checkers worldwide, there are more basic obstacles to
overcome.
Zahedur
Arman, founding president of BD FactCheck in Bangladesh, highlighted some of
them in his keynote address on Wednesday about the state of fact-checking in the
Global South. Among the key challenges he cited: access to reliable data,
freedom of expression, machine learning tools in other languages and a
sustainable business model.
Those
aren’t
uncommon obstacles for fact-checking projects around the world. But they do
pose serious challenges to the continued growth of the industry, which has
expanded to 188 organizations in more than 60 countries, according to a Duke
Reporters’ Lab census published
this week.
And
while separate in focus, the problems of scale and support are at least
somewhat connected.
During
his keynote address Wednesday, Peter Cunliffe-Jones, who recently
stepped down as director of Africa Check (and is currently a senior adviser
for the IFCN), spoke about how misinformation can have drastic effects on
people’s actual lives. The
rise of health misinformation about vaccines has correlated with outbreaks
of preventable diseases like
measles worldwide, and social media hoaxes regularly stir social and
religious tensions in
countries like Nigeria.
Those
are bigger problems than any one fact-checker — or even a slew of fact-checkers
— can solve. But everything isn’t doomed; there are already a few
promising endeavors aimed at addressing widespread misinformation at scale,
while also lending critical support to organizations that need it to get their
work off the ground.
After
discussions about attacks
on fact-checkers at last year’s Global Fact, the IFCN launched
a fund for organizations facing legal challenges worldwide. During his
keynote, Cunliffe-Jones said Africa Check is exploring how to partner with
African health authorities to surface and debunk popular rumors and get fact
checks in front of patients who need it most.
He
likened those kinds of partnerships to a herd of sharks and
misinformation, a “multi-tentacular” problem, to an octopus.
“With
one shark versus an octopus, I put my money on an octopus,” Cunliffe-Jones said
during his remarks. “With many sharks, I believe our chances get better.”
As
Mevan Babakar, head of automated fact-checking at Full Fact, tweeted
on Wednesday, “fact-checking has to be more than just checking.”
“Checking
alone is not enough to diagnose problems, or to eventually solve those problems
at scale. Let's not lose sight of that goal,” she said. “We need to have more
than just individual fact checks — we need to aim for corrections, mapping
spread, identifying key actors, changing people's behavior, and we must collect
these as case studies to understand the landscape much better than we currently
do.”
Not
at Global Fact? No problem — here’s
a live stream of the main sessions and here’s
a guide for getting the most out of the conference remotely.
. . . technology
·
Last
week we tackled the
issue of deepfakes, the extent of the problem and potential policies around
it. This week, the Indian fact-checking site Boom
looked at how manipulated videos could evolve in India, where cheapfakes
are already plentiful. Meanwhile, Vice
pointed out that the Zuckerberg deepfake posted on Instagram last week
forced Facebook’s fact-checking partners to debunk art.
·
The
email marketing platform Mailchimp
has become the latest platform to block anti-vaccination content. A number of
companies have taken similar action around the world, and U.S. lawmakers have
started looking at the problem, though they haven’t
settled on a clear course of action.
·
Content
moderation and community standards are confusing enough, even before you
consider that the platforms all have different policies. Slate has an
enlightening explainer from Subramaniam Vincent, director of journalism and
media ethics at the Santa Clara University’s Markkula Center for Applied
Ethics. And Wired published an article that posed
the question: Could Facebook learn something from the Wikipedia model in
its fight against misinformation?
. . . politics
·
A
report from the European Commission suggests Russia hasn’t let up in its
efforts to spread disinformation and chaos surrounding elections worldwide.
The New
York Times called the report “the first official substantiation” by the
commission of the role that Russians and other groups played in disinformation
in May’s European elections.
·
But
... Europe is actually better than the United States in addressing the
challenge of disinformation, according to a
new report for the Atlantic Council. In a piece
for The Washington Post, the report’s authors said U.S. officials lag
Europe in both the “strategic framing of the challenge and policy actions to
deal with it.”
·
United
Kingdom Prime Minister Theresa May will be remembered for her tendency to make
a bunch of unrelated claims all at once. The move is so common that Full Fact coined
a term for it: “factbombing,” which the organization wrote may be harmful
for the public debate.
. . . the future of news
·
Concern
about misinformation and disinformation “remains high” even though publishers
are trying to build confidence with readers, according to the Reuters
Institute’s digital news report, which came out last week. The
report is based on a YouGov survey of more than 75,000 online news
consumers in 38 countries.
·
Sixty-three
percent of Americans say made-up or altered videos and images create a great
deal of confusion about current issues and events, a
Pew Research survey found.
·
People
are using the humanitarian crisis in Sudan to get followers on Instagram, The
Atlantic’s Taylor Lorenz reported. The accounts purport to be helping
supply meals to Sudanese civilians.
U.S.
politicians love to make overly broad claims about legislation, perhaps
thinking they can get away with it because few people actually understand how
Congress works.
This
week, the House of Representatives’ Democratic leader, Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), and
Rep. Katie Hill (D-Calif.) criticized Republican colleagues who voted against
the annual defense policy bill, saying that in doing so they opposed a pay
raise for members of the military. The Washington Post’s Fact Checker gave
the politicians three Pinocchios (mostly false) for that.
The
problem? The pay raises take effect regardless of what’s in that bill. Another
law makes the pay raises automatic.
“This
is a good example of how politicians can take a sprawling piece of legislation,
cherry-pick one part, take it out of context and gin up an attack line,” The
Post’s Salvador Rizzo wrote.
What we liked: Hoyer’s staff replied to The Post that
since funding for the pay hikes is authorized by the bill, the Republicans were
voting against the raise by voting against the bill funding them. That sounds
plausible but is actually a rhetorical dance that The Post wasn’t willing to
join. The real question is whether the raises would occur regardless of what
happens with this bill, and the answer is yes.
1.
The
next pandemic will be a two-front war — the disease as well as the “deluge of
rumors, misinformation and flat-out lies” on the internet, a Harvard
cybersecurity expert warned
in The New York Times.
2.
Hoaxes
and falsehoods have been spreading during the protests in Hong Kong over the
past couple weeks. BuzzFeed
News took a look at some of the more prominent ones.
3.
How
many ways are there for fact-checkers to rate a falsehood? Daniel told us in
this piece on Poynter.org.
4.
The
Associated Press uncovered
a network of fake LinkedIn profiles that spies were using to connect with
targets.
5.
A
wealthy Manhattan couple is providing significant funding for the anti-vaccine
movement, The
Washington Post reported. How they came to the movement is unknown “but
their financial impact has been enormous,” the piece says.
6.
Per
AFP: No, the Trump administration has
not placed a ban on student visas for Nigerians.
7.
The
world’s biggest advertisers and ad agencies are
banding together to help rid online environments of misinformation and
harmful content.
8.
Twitter
announced
last week that it had removed almost 4,800 accounts it believes are
associated with or directly backed by the Iranian government. It also said it
removed accounts connected with misinformation in Russia, Venezuela and in
Spain, where it found fake accounts engaged in spreading misinformation about
Catalan independence referendum.
9.
The
latest disinformation threat, according to the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, involves old news stories. They may not
be fake, but their lack of current context can badly mislead readers. Read more
in
this story from Daniel.
10. Speaking of the CBC, a viral story about
a Canadian province’s school bus rules is a case study in how even legitimate
news can be misleading. Business
Insider explained how.