City
Epaper

Instagram partners fact checkers globally to combat misinformation

By IANS | Updated: December 17, 2019 10:50 IST

To combat the spread of misinformation, Facebook-owned Instagram has announced to expand its fact-checking programme globally to allow fact-checking organizations assess and rate misinformation on its platform.

Open in App

In May, Instagram began working with third-party fact-checkers in the US to help identify, review and label false information. It will now work with third-party organizations worldwide to assess the truthfulness of photo and video content on its app.

"These partners independently assess false information to help us catch it and reduce its distribution," the company said in a statement late Monday.

"When content has been rated as false or partly false by a third-party fact-checker, we reduce its distribution by removing it from Explore and hashtag pages. In addition, it will be labeled so people can better decide for themselves what to read, trust, and share," it added.

When these labels are applied, they will appear to everyone around the world viewing that content - in feed, profile, stories, and direct messages.

Instagram said it will use image matching technology to find further instances of this content and apply the label, helping reduce the spread of misinformation.

"In addition, if something is rated false or partly false on Facebook, starting today we'll automatically label identical content if it is posted on Instagram (and vice versa)," said the company.

The label will link out to the rating from the fact-checker and provide links to articles from credible sources that debunk the claim(s) made in the post.

To determine which content should be sent to fact-checkers for review, Instagram said it uses a combination of feedback from its community and technology.

Earlier this year, its added a "False Information" feedback option, and these reports, along with other signals, help us to better identify and take action on potentially false information.

Earlier, to tackle bullying on its platform, Instagram rolled out a new feature that notifies people when their captions on a photo or video may be considered offensive, and gives them a chance to pause and reconsider their words before posting.

"As part of our long-term commitment to lead the fight against online bullying, we've developed and tested Artificial Intelligence that can recognize different forms of bullying on Instagram," said the company.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Iansus
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIndian-Origin Man Beheaded In US In Front Of Family After Violent Dispute

BusinessAnil Ambani’s Reliance Power and Reliance Infra Shares Zoom Even as Indian Markets Tumble Amid US Tariffs

InternationalMissouri House Blast: 5 Injured After Huge Explosion Damages 20 Homes in St Louis County

InternationalHurricane Erin Enters Into Category 2 Storm With Maximum Winds of 100 mph, Heavy Rainfall Over Caribbean Islands Likely

InternationalIowa Shooting: Two Killed, One Injured In Firing and Blast in Glenwood; Suspect Arrested

टेकमेनिया Realted Stories

TechnologyCentre launches adoption awareness campaign for children with special needs

TechnologyRBI MPC keeps rates steady, raises GDP projection, trims inflation forecast

TechnologyGST revenues up 9.1 pc at Rs 1.89 lakh crore in Sep

TechnologyDPIIT, Thermo Fisher Scientific tie up to boost India’s biotech startup ecosystem

TechnologyTata Communications drives BSNL’s pan-India eSIM rollout