Sunday, February 26, 2017


Facebook and fake news  

According to Timothy Lee, News stories are supposed to help ordinary voters understand the world around them. But in the 2016 election, news stories online too often had the opposite effect. Stories rocketed around the internet that were misleading, sloppily reported, or in some cases totally made up. Over the course of 2016, Facebook users learned that the pope endorsed Donald Trump (he didn’t), that a Democratic operative was murdered after agreeing to testify against Hillary Clinton (it never happened), that Bill Clinton raped a 13-year-old girl (a total fabricationand many other totally bogus “news” stories. Stories like this thrive on Facebook because Facebook’s algorithm prioritizes “engagement” and a reliable way to get readers to engage is by making up outrageous nonsense about politicians they don’t like.   

 "Since the election, there has been a fierce debate about whether the flood of fake news much of it prejudicial to Hillary Clinton could have swung the election to Donald Trump." Internet giants are coming under increasing pressure to do something about the problem. On Monday, Google announced that it was going to cut fake news sites off from access to its vast advertising network, depriving them of a key revenue source. Facebook quickly followed suit with its own ad network. At the same time, the CEO of Facebook Mark Zuckerberg has signaled reluctance to have Facebook become more active in weeding out fake news stories. He described it as “a pretty crazy idea” to think fake news on Facebook could have swayed the election."

Mark Zuckerberg, says Facebook will look for new ways to stop the spread of fake news, but he also argues that “we must proceed very carefully” and that Facebook must be “extremely cautious about becoming arbiters of truth ourselves.” The importance of this issue is only going to grow over time. More and more people are getting their news from the internet, putting more and more power in the hands of companies like Google, Twitter, and especially Facebook. The leaders of those companies are going to be under increasing pressure to use that power wisely.

1 comment:

  1. You have an interesting conversation brewing here! I do happen to think that blogging and microblogging have blurred the lines that you mention above here in what is reported as news. While some very newsworthy individuals have blogs (and we explore them quite a bit here), the fact remains that you can create a blog and say almost anything. The more popular you get, the more your words are spread...
    P.S. Can you bury those hyperlinks so that they don't interrupt the flow of the text?

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