Twitter needs to harness automation to combat falsehoods – Poynter

Posted: May 29, 2020 at 1:10 am

Twitter got some great headlines this week when it started linking President Donald Trumps tweets to fact-checks.

Twitter has finally started fact-checking Trump, said Recode. Twitters first fact-check on President Trump calls out false claims, said Ars Technica.

But Twitters effort was more symbolic than substantial. Although the company has taken some good initial steps, it needs to do a lot more at a massive scale to show it is serious about checking the avalanche of misinformation on its platform. That will also help the company use a wider array of fact-checking journalists to show its impartiality.

The misinformation problem is huge and extends far beyond Trump, whose countless falsehoods mostly go unchallenged by Twitters moderators, even when he flings unsubstantiated murder allegations at his political enemies. Thousands of other politicians and political groups tweet false claims hourly and armies of followers spread them.

This is not an issue that any tech platform can handle case-by-case. Its an internet-sized problem that demands an internet-scale solution, using technology that can be deployed as fast as falsehoods spread.

The worlds fact-checkers can help. Most now use a standard called ClaimReview that has created a database of about 54,000 fact-checks that can be accessed by Twitter (or anyone) to identify false and misleading claims. It grows by 89 new fact-checks every day.

ClaimReview isnt sexy. Its just a set of standards developed by our Duke Reporters Lab in a partnership with Google that independent fact-checkers use to identify the claim they have checked, who made it and whether it was accurate. But ClaimReview makes it easy for Google, Facebook (disclosure: both companies have provided grants for our work on automated fact-checking and ClaimReview in the Reporters Lab) and, someday soon, perhaps Twitter, to quickly match a claim with a fact-check. Thats the power of automation. And ClaimReview is available and free for anyone to use.

Automation is important because Twitter is mostly using an old-school approach humans to combat misinformation. Thats not a good long-term strategy because it wont address the thousands of false tweets that go unanswered every day. The solution needs to be scalable.

The problem isnt limited to claims that are spoken or written, which is why were developing a sibling of ClaimReview called MediaReview that fact-checkers will use when they debunk false or misleading videos or images. MediaReview, which like ClaimReview will be open to anyone, can help Twitter slow the spread of fake videos and bogus images.

Scaling up also will help Twitter rebut attacks that its being partisan. With automation, ClaimReview can be applied even-handedly to politicians from all parties.

Misinformation is big and worrisome. But Twitter has the opportunity to build on its encouraging first steps and make a substantial dent in the problem by enlisting the work of the worlds independent fact-checkers. The company should move beyond symbolic efforts and do it in a big way.

Bill Adair is the Knight Professor of Journalism and Public Policy at Duke University and the director of the Duke Reporters Lab.

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Twitter needs to harness automation to combat falsehoods - Poynter

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