Tech giants across World working on ‘Trust Mark’ to combat ‘FakeNews’

in #news6 years ago

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Facebook, Google, Twitter and several other media companies including The Washington Post plan to begin using “Trust Mark” to help assure users of the reliability of their content and combat fake news from spreading across the network.

These new indicators will appear as symbols in online journalism — attesting how a story was reported, by whom and their credentials, and an media property’s standards — and as pieces of online code to deliver improved search and news results.

The developments come as part of the social media giants and media outlets seek to reverse Americans’ declining trust in news and in stories they see passed along on social media.

“As a news consumer, I want news I can trust. I want to be able to read a piece of news and know who’s behind it, where the information comes from, and the reporting values of the news organization,” said Craiglist founder Craig Newmark, whose philanthropic fund is helping fund this offensive on fake news called The Trust Project.

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Facebook will add Trust Indicators to its information “button” giving users context about articles in their news feed. “We believe that helping people access this important contextual information can help them evaluate if articles are from a publisher they trust, and if the story itself is credible,” said Facebook product manager Andrew Anker in an Facebook.com post Thursday.

Google plans to look at ways to use the indicators “next to articles that may appear on Google News, Google Search, and other Google products where news can be found,” said Jeff Chang, Google’s group product manager for search, in a post on Google’s blog.

On news sites, the indicators may appear on article pages and on other pages on the site, such as an editorial or corrections page, to attest to outlets’ commitment to truthful reporting. “The public can use them to see who and what is behind the news they are reading, and how the story was built,” Lehrman said in an email interview. “They will help readers see the difference between an opinion, analysis and news article, on the Trust Project launch sites.”

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Facebook, Google and Twitter have all been hit with charges that they have abetted the spread of fake news — including, as addressed in recent Congressional hearings, by allowing Russian troll farms to place fake news items and ads and have them go viral online.

“We believe the indicators can help our algorithms better understand authoritative journalism – and help us to better surface it to consumers,” said Richard Gingras, vice president of news products at Google, in a statement. Google is among those helping fund the Trust Project.

“The hope with the Trust Project’s Trust Indicators is to empower news consumers, like me, to make informed decisions about the news we read,” Newmark said. “And it helps news outlets and digital platforms be transparent so that I have the tools to know which information I can trust and which I should be skeptical of.
The project is also funded by the founder of Craiglist’s philanthropic fund, the John S. and James L. Knight foundation, the Democracy Fund and the Markkula Foundation. Based at Santa Clara (Calif.) University’s Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, the project was begun in 2015 by award-winning journalist Sally Lehrman.

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This is a great idea, but who is deciding what is trustworthy or not?

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