Facebook’s fake news crisis deepens
Buzzfeed
News is reporting that "more than dozens" of Facebook employees
have created an unofficial task force dedicated to addressing the issue.
Buzzfeed
quoted one member of that task force, who did not want to be named over fears
for their job.
“[Mark
Zuckerberg] knows, and those of us at the company know, that fake news ran wild
on our platform during the entire campaign season,” the source said.
Facebook
has not responded to the BBC’s request for comment on Buzzfeed’s report.
Meanwhile,
Google on Monday announced it would do more to prevent fake news sites from
making money through advertising.
Agitated Zuckerberg
Earlier
on Monday Facebook denied claims that a tool to whittle out fake news had been
created before the election, only to be shelved due to concerns it would make
Facebook look like it was censoring conservative views.
Mr
Zuckerberg appears to be increasingly agitated by the suggestion that fake news
was a serious problem on his site.
On
Saturday night he posted a lengthy update to his profile page defending it.
"Of
all the content on Facebook, more than 99% of what people see is authentic,” he
wrote.
"Only
a very small amount is fake news and hoaxes. The hoaxes that do exist are not
limited to one partisan view, or even to politics."
His
conclusion: "Overall, this makes it extremely unlikely hoaxes changed the
outcome of this election in one direction or the other."
That
statistic - 99% - has been the subject of much derision as it apparently refers
to content of any kind being posted to Facebook.
In
May, Facebook came under heavy criticism after it was alleged that human
editors working on the Trending Topics section of Facebook were removing
stories that pushed a conservative or pro-Trump agenda.
Facebook
denied this was the case, but removed the human element anyway in an attempt to
appear neutral.
Google action
Facebook
is not alone in coming under fire over fake news.
Google
said it would be clamping down on abuses of its AdSense advertising platform.
"We
will restrict ad serving on pages that misrepresent, misstate, or conceal
information about the publisher, the publisher's content, or the primary
purpose of the web property,” said Google spokeswoman Andrea Faville.
That
announcement followed reports that Google’s top-ranking news result for the
term "final election result” highlighted a story from a fake news site
with inaccurate information on the vote tally. Not long after Google's
announcement, Facebook said it too had added "fake news" to the types
of site not allowed to use the Facebook Audience Network, a system similar to
Google's Adsense but smaller in scale and limited to third-party apps.
Facebook
said its decision was about clarity rather than any new policy, and that no
action was being taken against any service as a result.

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