Facebook rolls out fake news filter in Germany
Facebook will begin rolling out its fake news filter in Germany, The Financial Times reports, where lawmakers have expressed growing concern
over the spread of fabricated news stories and Russian interference
ahead of national elections later this year. The social network will
begin fact-checking and flagging fake news for users in Germany over the
coming weeks, according to the FT. The tools were first launched in the US last month, as part of a partnership with independent fact-checking organizations.
German politicians have warned of the effect that fake
news could have on federal elections slated for this fall, following a
spate of fabricated articles and hoaxes during the US presidential
election. Lawmakers have considered imposing fines
on Facebook and other social media companies that allow fake news to
spread, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel has warned of Russian
interference through propaganda or cyberattacks. It was reported last
week that the German government has opened an investigation into the spread of fake news, after Breitbart published a false story claiming that a mob set fire to a church on New Year’s Eve.
Under Facebook’s fact-checking system, stories reported as fake by users will be sent to Correctiv,
a nonprofit news organization based in Berlin. If an item is deemed
false, it will be marked as “disputed,” along with a justification for
the label, and the site will warn users before they share it. Disputed
items will also show up lower in Facebook’s algorithmically-determined
News Feeds.
A Facebook spokesperson tells the FT that the
company is looking for other media partners in Germany, and that it
plans to launch its fact-checking tools in other countries, as well.
“Our focus is on Germany right now but we’re certainly thinking through
what countries will unveil next,” the spokesperson told the newspaper.
German authorities have urged Facebook and other tech
companies to aggressively police both fake news and hate speech. Justice
Minister Heiko Maas said
last year that Facebook should be regulated as a media company in
Germany, which would make it legally responsible for any content it
publishes. The government has reportedly considered setting up a bureau that would track and combat fake news, as the Czech Republic has done, though there are concerns over authorities being seen as interfering with the media ahead of elections.
In an interview with the German newspaper Welt Am Sonntag
this week, Maas said that fake news represents a “danger to our culture
of debate,” and that social media companies “have a duty” to rein it
in.
“It can’t be in Facebook’s interest that its platform is
misused in order to spread lies and hate campaigns,” Maas told the
newspaper. “Criminal content should be deleted immediately once it has
been reported. And it must be easier for users to report fake news.”
The article was published on : theverge
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