Published 20:15 IST, September 25th 2019
Facebook will not fact-check statements politicians post to the site
Facebook will not fact-check the statements politicians post to the site, the social network announced ahead of the US 2020 elections. Here's what it means:
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Facebook will t fact-check statements politicians post to site, social network anunced Tuesday ahe of US 2020 elections, even as it works to discredit false information meant to manipulate public opinion. While social network relies on third-party fact-checkers, including news organisations such as AFP, to help it discredit viral misinformation, it will stop short of wing into veracity of political claims.
"We don't believe... that it's an appropriate role for us to referee political debates and prevent a politician's speech from reaching its audience and being subject to public debate and scrutiny," said Nick Clegg, Facebook vice president of global affairs and communications. "This means that we will t send organic content or s from politicians to our third-party fact-checking partners for review," he said.
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Ahe of US 2020 elections
Worries have run high ahe of vember 2020 polls following revelations of a wide-ranging misinformation campaign on Facebook and or social platforms, largely directed by Russian operatives, in 2016 elections. Overwhelmed by such disinformation, Facebook has set up partnerships with media outlets to verify articles and posts found to be of a dubious nature, with journalists' contributions appearing below problematic content, which is labelled as doubtful. Exclusion of politicians' discourse has been part of Facebook's policy for over a year, Clegg said.
"However, when a politician shares previously debunked content including links, videos and photos, we plan to demote that content, display related information from fact-checkers, and reject its inclusion in vertisements," he said.
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Clegg, a former British deputy prime minister, joined Facebook less than a year ago to help fix its scandal-plagued im following Russian social media campaigns during elections. Facebook meanwhile walks a fine line in its attempts to balance freedom of expression with regulation of inappropriate content. Its chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has taken steps to increase transparency, especially when it comes to political vertising. social network has come under fire from critics, particularly Democrats, who believe that tech giants have become too powerful. Meanwhile Republicans, including US President Donald Trump, regularly accuse social network of censoring conservative voices.
17:39 IST, September 25th 2019