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Facebooks private groups are abuzz with coronavirus fake news

by The Editor
March 31, 2020
in Tech
0
Facebooks private groups are abuzz with coronavirus fake news

Conspiracy theories, bogus scientific information and links to online scams about the coronavirus pandemic are rife on Facebook despite the social networking giants efforts to clamp down on misinformation, according to a review by POLITICO of thousands of Facebook posts.

These falsities — often born out of peoples hunger to find accurate information about COVID-19 — are being shared in so-called private groups, or invite-only sections of the global platform, which have gained tens of thousands of participants, collectively, in recent weeks.

Unlike peoples Facebook feeds, which have been peppered with public health advisories and other official advice, private Facebook groups have faced little or no oversight. A review of more than 30 coronavirus-related groups over the past two weeks brought up dozens of examples of lies, half-truths and rumors circulating in a variety of languages and targeting people across Europe and the United States.

While the social networking giant now provides greater transparency on groups that buy political advertising on its network, there is little, if any, public data on how people interact in these private groups, which are increasingly acting as “ground zero” in the spread of digital misinformation.

“Its a huge problem because we have absolutely no idea what the scale of the problem is,” said Chloe Colliver, who heads the digital research unit at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a London-based think tank that focuses on extreme speech and whose team has been tracking coronavirus-related misinformation across social networks. “But what we do know is the scale is quite large.”

Facebooks efforts include relying on artificial intelligence to automatically remove harmful content, in part because the companys human moderators are on home lockdown and cannot carry out the work.

So far, there is little evidence of widespread coordinated campaigns, potentially supported by state-backed groups, to spread online falsehoods, though officials have highlighted low-level activity by activists linked to both Moscow and Beijing.

But Mark Zuckerberg, Facebooks chief executive, told reporters on March 18 that his company was taking greater steps to stop COVID-19 misinformation from spreading online because it represented a direct threat to life.

“In a case of a pandemic like this when we are seeing posts that are urging people not to get treatment, thats a completely different class of content versus the back-and-forth of what candidates may say about each other,” he said.

Facebooks efforts include relying on artificial intelligence to automatically remove harmful content, in part because the companys human moderators, who are primarily outside contractors, are on home lockdown and cannot carry out the work.

In recent weeks, people have complained they have been unable to post legitimate or official content about COVID-19 because the tech giants automated systems claim that such content breaches its terms of service. Zuckerberg told reporters that these errors were due to a coding bug, which had subsequently been fixed.

The tech giant also said it had beefed up its network of independent fact-checkers, and removed private Facebook groups that spread falsehoods from recommendations shown to users about communities that they may want to join. Within these invite-only online communities, the company also has added an information box that links directly to official government advice.

“Were focused on connecting people with accurate information and removing harmful misinformation related to COVID-19, including in groups,” Clare Wareing, a company spokeswoman, said in a statement.

Down the rabbit hole

Despite these reassurances, it does not take long to find reams of falsehoods in private Facebook groups.

Starting on March 6, POLITICO joined more than 30 invite-only communities with names including “Coronavirus Updates” and “Global Coronavirus News & Updates,” some of which have garnered tens of thousands of members.

In often heartfelt posts, people search for the latest information, asking others for updates on how to tackle the virus that has infected more than 670,000 people worldwide, leaving 31,700 dead. That includes posting articles from reputable media outlets, asking questions to those who are being treated for COVID-19 and sharing warnings about the seriousness of the pandemic.

“The virus continues to spread at full speed all over the world, which shows that the measures are insufficient. Would it be a good result to apply hard methods like China?'” Oguzhan Evren, a Facebook user from Turkey, posted on the “CoronaVirus Updates” group, leading to 30 comments from others across the globe.

Still, misinformation remains widespread.

In several posts, which often link to videos on other social networks like Twitter and YouTube, Facebook users reused the same footage of patients lying in a nondescript hospital floor as evidence of different countries inability to cope with COVID-19. POLITICO observed people posting the same videos to describe the situation in France, Spain, the United Kingdom and the U.S. These misleading posts were also disseminated to further Facebook groups.

In a separate video, a British man posted that he had received multiple text messages from the countrys government saying he would be fined £30 for leaving his home three times in a given day. No such penalties exist. In another, an American woman linked to a video on YouTube in which she said the coronavirus was a biological weapon used by foreign governments to weaken the U.S. Someone else claimed, incorrectly, that global projections from Imperial College London, whose figures are used widely by governments, about how mRead More – Source

politico

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Conspiracy theories, bogus scientific information and links to online scams about the coronavirus pandemic are rife on Facebook despite the social networking giants efforts to clamp down on misinformation, according to a review by POLITICO of thousands of Facebook posts.

These falsities — often born out of peoples hunger to find accurate information about COVID-19 — are being shared in so-called private groups, or invite-only sections of the global platform, which have gained tens of thousands of participants, collectively, in recent weeks.

Unlike peoples Facebook feeds, which have been peppered with public health advisories and other official advice, private Facebook groups have faced little or no oversight. A review of more than 30 coronavirus-related groups over the past two weeks brought up dozens of examples of lies, half-truths and rumors circulating in a variety of languages and targeting people across Europe and the United States.

While the social networking giant now provides greater transparency on groups that buy political advertising on its network, there is little, if any, public data on how people interact in these private groups, which are increasingly acting as “ground zero” in the spread of digital misinformation.

“Its a huge problem because we have absolutely no idea what the scale of the problem is,” said Chloe Colliver, who heads the digital research unit at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a London-based think tank that focuses on extreme speech and whose team has been tracking coronavirus-related misinformation across social networks. “But what we do know is the scale is quite large.”

Facebooks efforts include relying on artificial intelligence to automatically remove harmful content, in part because the companys human moderators are on home lockdown and cannot carry out the work.

So far, there is little evidence of widespread coordinated campaigns, potentially supported by state-backed groups, to spread online falsehoods, though officials have highlighted low-level activity by activists linked to both Moscow and Beijing.

But Mark Zuckerberg, Facebooks chief executive, told reporters on March 18 that his company was taking greater steps to stop COVID-19 misinformation from spreading online because it represented a direct threat to life.

“In a case of a pandemic like this when we are seeing posts that are urging people not to get treatment, thats a completely different class of content versus the back-and-forth of what candidates may say about each other,” he said.

Facebooks efforts include relying on artificial intelligence to automatically remove harmful content, in part because the companys human moderators, who are primarily outside contractors, are on home lockdown and cannot carry out the work.

In recent weeks, people have complained they have been unable to post legitimate or official content about COVID-19 because the tech giants automated systems claim that such content breaches its terms of service. Zuckerberg told reporters that these errors were due to a coding bug, which had subsequently been fixed.

The tech giant also said it had beefed up its network of independent fact-checkers, and removed private Facebook groups that spread falsehoods from recommendations shown to users about communities that they may want to join. Within these invite-only online communities, the company also has added an information box that links directly to official government advice.

“Were focused on connecting people with accurate information and removing harmful misinformation related to COVID-19, including in groups,” Clare Wareing, a company spokeswoman, said in a statement.

Down the rabbit hole

Despite these reassurances, it does not take long to find reams of falsehoods in private Facebook groups.

Starting on March 6, POLITICO joined more than 30 invite-only communities with names including “Coronavirus Updates” and “Global Coronavirus News & Updates,” some of which have garnered tens of thousands of members.

In often heartfelt posts, people search for the latest information, asking others for updates on how to tackle the virus that has infected more than 670,000 people worldwide, leaving 31,700 dead. That includes posting articles from reputable media outlets, asking questions to those who are being treated for COVID-19 and sharing warnings about the seriousness of the pandemic.

“The virus continues to spread at full speed all over the world, which shows that the measures are insufficient. Would it be a good result to apply hard methods like China?'” Oguzhan Evren, a Facebook user from Turkey, posted on the “CoronaVirus Updates” group, leading to 30 comments from others across the globe.

Still, misinformation remains widespread.

In several posts, which often link to videos on other social networks like Twitter and YouTube, Facebook users reused the same footage of patients lying in a nondescript hospital floor as evidence of different countries inability to cope with COVID-19. POLITICO observed people posting the same videos to describe the situation in France, Spain, the United Kingdom and the U.S. These misleading posts were also disseminated to further Facebook groups.

In a separate video, a British man posted that he had received multiple text messages from the countrys government saying he would be fined £30 for leaving his home three times in a given day. No such penalties exist. In another, an American woman linked to a video on YouTube in which she said the coronavirus was a biological weapon used by foreign governments to weaken the U.S. Someone else claimed, incorrectly, that global projections from Imperial College London, whose figures are used widely by governments, about how mRead More – Source

politico

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