Facebook and Instagram original company Meta Platforms Inc. said that on Thursday, it would start testing its Crowd-Sard Fact-Clocking Program, community notes on Thursday. It will initially be based on the rating system used by Elon Musk’s X.
Meta ended its fact-zancha program in January. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said at the time said that facts-stores had become “politically biased”, using some languages that conservatives criticized their platforms for a long time. But media experts and those studying social media were included in the policy change of meta.
This decision “not only removes a valuable resource for users, but it also provides an air of validity to a popular disintegration story: This fact-glass is politically biased. Fact-stores provide a valuable service by adding significant reference to viral claims, which talk to millions of people for the consciousness.
Meta began the fact investigation in December 2016, after being selected for President Donald Trump for his first term, in response to criticism that “fake news” was spreading on his platforms. Over the years, the Tech veteran claimed that it was working with more than 100 organizations in more than 60 languages, which was fighting misinformation.
The Associated Press ended its participation in the Meta’s fact-checking program more than a year ago.
Community notes will change the fact probe, although not now. Meta said that a possible contribution in the US may start signing up to participate in the program, but the notes they write will not be visible immediately.
“We will gradually and randomly accept people from the weightlist, and will take time to test the writing and rating system before publicly published any note,” Meta said.
Meta said that it would not decide whether the rated or written and notes “will not be published until the contributors with a series of approaches did not agree on them widely.” Meta said that unlike facts, where posts were determined for misinformation, their distribution was reduced, posts with community notes would not be punished, Mata said.
The fact check will remain in place outside the US for now, although Meta says it is eventually planning to roll out community notes worldwide.
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