WebProNews

Tag: disinformation

  • Twitter Will Deploy ‘Read Before You Retweet’ Prompt to All Users

    Twitter Will Deploy ‘Read Before You Retweet’ Prompt to All Users

    Twitter is planning on bringing its ‘Read Before You Retweet’ prompt to all users, following several months of testing.

    Twitter began testing the feature in June in an effort to help stop the spread of disinformation that social media platforms have increasingly been called to task for. The results of the tests have been positive, with significant upticks in the percentage of people actually looking at the articles they retweet.

    https://twitter.com/TwitterComms/status/1309178716988354561?s=20

    Social media companies are looking at multiple ways of reigning in disinformation and radical content. Time will tell if Twitter’s new feature has a long-lasting impact.

  • Jigsaw Unveils Assembler Tool to Help Spot Deepfakes

    Jigsaw Unveils Assembler Tool to Help Spot Deepfakes

    Alphabet-owned company Jigsaw has unveiled a new tool called Assembler to help journalists spot doctored images and deepfakes, according to a blog post by CEO Jared Cohen.

    Deepfake images and videos are created using artificial intelligence, transposing one person’s likeness onto another’s body, making it appear someone is doing something they aren’t. Although still in the early stages of complexity, as deepfake technology progresses, experts fear it could have profound impacts on everything from personal scandals to the outcome of elections. For journalists, deepfakes and doctored images represent a threat to accuracy and journalistic integrity.

    As these kind of threats continue to emerge, Jigsaw “forecasts and confronts emerging threats, creating future-defining research and technology to keep our world safer,” including combating doctored images.

    “Jigsaw’s work requires forecasting the most urgent threats facing the internet, and wherever we traveled these past years — from Macedonia to Eastern Ukraine to the Philippines to Kenya and the United States — we observed an evolution in how disinformation was being used to manipulate elections, wage war, and disrupt civil society,” writes Cohen.

    Jigsaw is working with a select group of journalists and fact-checkers to test and improve Assembler before making it widely available.

    “Assembler is an early stage experimental platform advancing new detection technology to help fact-checkers and journalists identify manipulated media,” adds Cohen. “In addition, the platform creates a space where we can collaborate with other researchers who are developing detection technology. We built it to help advance the field of science, and to help provide journalists and fact-checkers with strong signals that, combined with their expertise, can help them judge if and where an image has been manipulated. With the help of a small number of global news providers and fact checking organizations including Agence France-Presse, Animal Politico, Code for Africa, Les Décodeurs du Monde, and Rappler, we’re testing how Assembler performs in real newsrooms and updating it based on its utility and tester feedback.”

    Assembler’s release coincides with Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai expressing his belief that tech companies must be responsible for the technology they create, rather than simply unleashing tech and leaving others to figure out the ethical dilemmas.

  • Facebook Reveals New Census Interference Policy Ahead of 2020 Census

    Facebook Reveals New Census Interference Policy Ahead of 2020 Census

    Facebook received its share of criticism over the 2016 election thanks to Russian operatives using the social media platform to sow disinformation and disagreement. As a result, ahead of the 2020 census—the first people can complete online—Facebook is taking measures to protect against interference.

    In a blog post on the company’s site, Facebook outlines “a new census interference policy that bans misleading information about when and how to participate in the census and the consequences of participating. We are also introducing a new advertising policy that prohibits ads that portray census participation as useless or meaningless or advise people not to participate in the census.”

    The company worked with the U.S. Census Bureau, as well as the civil rights community “to develop thoughtful rules around prohibiting census interference on our platforms and making sure people can use their voice to be counted.”

    The post outlines some of the specifics involved in its new policy.


    “Our census interference policy will prohibit:

    • Misrepresentation of the dates, locations, times and methods for census participation;
    • Misrepresentation of who can participate in the census and what information and/or materials must be provided in order to participate;
    • Content stating that census participation may or will result in law enforcement consequences;
    • Misrepresentation of government involvement in the census, including that an individual’s census information will be shared with another government agency; and
    • Calls for coordinated interference that would affect an individual’s ability to participate in the census, enforcement of which often requires additional information and context.

    “We will begin enforcement next month and use a combination of technology and people to proactively identify content that may violate this policy. All content surfaced will be assessed by a team of reviewers who will benefit from the training and guidance of a consultant with census expertise. And as with voter interference, content that violates our census interference policy will not be allowed to remain on our platforms as newsworthy even if posted by a politician.”

    Information that may be inaccurate, but not necessarily violate the new policy, may still be fact-checked. If it is found to be false, it will have prominent labels and rank lower in news feeds. The company promises to share “accurate, non-partisan information about how to participate in the census in consultation with the US Census Bureau.”