Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Hundreds of posts spreading misinformation about Covid-19 are being left online, in accordance to a record from the Center for Countering Digital Hate.

Some 649 posts have been suggested to Facebook and Twitter, inclusive of false cures, anti-vaccination propaganda and conspiracy theories round 5G.

90% remained seen on-line afterwards except any warnings attached, the document suggests.

Facebook stated the pattern was once "not representative".

A spokesperson for Facebook said; "We are taking aggressive steps to do away with hazardous misinformation from our structures and have eliminated heaps of lots of these posts, such as claims about false cures.

"During March and April we positioned warning labels on round ninety million portions of content material associated to Covid-19 and these labels stopped human beings viewing the authentic content material 95% of the time.

"We will notify every body who has liked, shared or commented on posts associated to Covid-19 that we've got because removed."

Twitter stated that it was once prioritising the elimination of Covid-19 content material "when it has a name to motion that should probably reason harm".

"As we've got stated previously, we will now not take enforcement motion on each and every Tweet that includes incomplete or disputed data about Covid-19. Since introducing these new insurance policies on March 18 and as we have doubled down on tech, our computerized systems have challenged extra than 4.3 million money owed which had been focused on discussions round Covid-19 with spammy or manipulative behaviours."

 chief govt of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, stated the corporations have been "shirking their responsibilities".

"Their structures for reporting misinformation and dealing with it are surely now not suit for purpose.

"Social media giants have claimed many instances that they are taking Covid-19 related misinformation seriously, however this new lookup suggests that even when they are exceeded the posts merchandising misinformation, they fail to take action."

Rosanne Palmer-White, director of adolescence motion crew Restless Development, which additionally took section in the survey, stated younger human beings had been "doing their bit to cease the unfold of misinformation" however social media corporations had been "letting them down".

Both Twitter and Facebook face questions from the UK's Digital Culture Media and Sport sub-committee on the way they are dealing with coronavirus misinformation.

MPs have been no longer completely happy with an previously session. They demanded extra specific solutions and stated extra senior executives must attend the subsequent meeting.

For the study, ten volunteers from the UK, Ireland and Romania searched social media for misinformation from the stop of April to the quit of May.

They determined posts suggesting victims can get rid of coronavirus by way of ingesting aspirin dissolved in warm water or by using taking zinc and nutrition C and D supplements,

Twitter used to be deemed the least responsive, with solely 3% of the 179 posts acted upon.

Facebook eliminated 10% of the 334 posts mentioned and flagged any other 2% as false. Instagram, which Facebook owns, acted on 10% of the a hundred thirty five complaints it used to be sent.

Both the social networks insist they have made efforts to carry pretend information about the coronavirus below control.

Twitter has begun labelling tweets that unfold misinformation about Covid-19. Facebook has additionally eliminated some content, such as from businesses claiming the rollout of the 5G community was once a reason of the unfold of the virus.

Analysis

By Marianna Spring, Specialist disinformation and social media reporter
All eyes have been on how social media websites have tackled deceptive data on their structures in latest weeks - and all eyes will be on them once more today, as they're grilled via MPs.

Over the direction of the pandemic, distinctive social media corporations have made a range of modifications to their insurance policies to strive to handle unsafe and deceptive information. Facebook and YouTube each say they have cracked down on conspiracies that may want to do damage.

And in a high-profile move, Twitter determined to label a deceptive tweet by means of US President Donald Trump - even though it used to be one about postal vote casting as a substitute than coronavirus.

But these adjustments in coverage do not appear convenient to implement. In practice, deceptive posts are regularly now not stated - or when they are, they are now not continually removed. The query of the damage one of a kind posts pose seems to be at the root of this problem.

Messages posing an on the spot hazard to lifestyles are eliminated greater quickly. However, deceptive messages that pose a much less instantaneous danger can show to be simply as unsafe - such as these from anti-vaccination groups.
The human value of misinformation observed that the attainable for oblique damage brought about by using conspiracies and terrible records that undermine public fitness messaging - or an high quality vaccine - may want to be huge.

And as misinformation about protests and different information activities floods social media, it will become obvious that the pandemic is simply one of many battles in opposition to misinformation to be fought. 

Actress and singer Selena Gomez is suing the makers of a phone game, alleging they used her likeness with out permission.

The Clothes Forever Styling Game app lets gamers get dressed celeb avatars that resemble stars inclusive of the Kardashians, Adele and Gomez.

But Gomez's legal motion calls it "reprehensible" and a "gross violation" of her exposure rights.

And it asks for a jury trial to hear the case.

The app shop describes Clothes Forever as the "hottest new style sport".

"Kardashian, Gigi, Beyonce, Taylor and more can be dropping by and soliciting for your style advice," it says.

And as well as dressing up celebrities, players can "sell off sexy hunks like Leo, Justin, Zac or Messi".

The criminal document says manufacturers pay Gomez "tens of millions of dollars" for endorsement contracts, while sponsored social-media posts can attract $800,000 (£636,000) a time.

It compares a publicity photograph for Clothes Forever to a photoshoot Ms Gomez did with Canadian mag Flare in 2015.

And it describes Clothes Forever as "malicious program-riddled" software that would damage Gomez's recognition and make it more difficult to market her personal style-targeted video games.

Several companies are worried with the improvement and distribution of the software program along with China-based Guangzhou Feidong Software Technology Co, Forgame Holdings, registered in the Cayman Islands, and UK-registered Mutant Box Interactive Limited.

In 2014, Mean Girls actress Lindsay Lohan sued the makers of Grand Theft Auto V, claiming they had used her likeness with out permission.

However, a choose finally ruled the photos in the game were "satirical representations of the fashion, appearance and persona of a cutting-edge, seashore-going young female", rather than an approximation of Lohan.
Facebook users who have read, watched or shared false coronavirus content material will receive pop-up warnings as the enterprise tries to fight the spread of incorrect information.

The new indicators device is a reaction to what the World Health Organisation calls the "infodemic" round Covid-19.

An impartial take a look at suggests that the platform "sits at the epicentre of coronavirus misinformation".

Facebook says the research doesn't replicate the work it has achieved recently.

The California tech company says it'll start displaying the messages at the top of information feeds "in the coming weeks".

Truth redirect

The messages will direct human beings to a World Health Organisation web site wherein myths are debunked.

A Facebook spokesman stated the move will "join individuals who may additionally have interacted with harmful misinformation approximately the virus with the fact from authoritative sources, in case they see or hear those claims once more off of Facebook".

The changes had been induced by using a main take a look at of incorrect information at the platform across six languages through Avaaz, a crowd-funded activist group.

Researchers say thousands and thousands of Facebook customers continue to be uncovered to coronavirus misinformation, with none warning on the platform.

The group observed a number of the most dangerous falsehoods had acquired loads of hundreds of perspectives, together with claims like "black humans are immune to coronavirus" and "Coronavirus is destroyed by chlorine dioxide".

Avaaz researchers analysed a pattern of greater than a hundred pieces of Facebook coronavirus incorrect information at the website's English, Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic, Italian and French variations.

The studies found that:



  • It can take the agency up to 22 days to trouble caution labels for coronavirus incorrect information, with delays even when Facebook companions had flagged the dangerous content for the platform.
  • 29% of false content inside the sample become no longer labelled in any respect at the English language version of the internet site
  • It is worse in some other languages, with sixty eight% of Italian-language content, 70% of Spanish-language content, and 50% of Portuguese-language content material not labelled as false
  • Facebook's Arabic language efforts are extra a hit, with simplest 22% of the sample of misleading posts final unlabelled.
  • Facebook says it is continuing to increase its multilingual network of reality-checkers issuing grants and partnering with relied on establishments in more than 50 languages.

  • Fadi Quran, Campaign Director at Avaaz said: "Facebook sits on the epicenter of the incorrect information disaster.


"But the enterprise is popping a essential nook today to smooth up this poisonous data environment, becoming the first social media platform to alert all users who have been uncovered to coronavirus incorrect information, and directing them to life-saving data."


One of the falsehoods that researchers tracked was the claim that human beings ought to rid the body of the virus via ingesting a variety of water and gargling with salt or vinegar. The put up changed into shared more than 31,000 instances before ultimately being taken down after Avaaz flagged it to Facebook.

However, more than 2,six hundred clones of the post remain at the platform, with almost one hundred,000 interactions and most of those cloned posts don't have any caution labels from Facebook.

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder and chief govt, defended his company's work in an online submit announcing: "On Facebook and Instagram, we've got now directed greater than  billion people to authoritative health sources via our Covid-19 Information Center and academic pop-ups, with greater than 350 million human beings clicking thru to analyze extra

"If a bit of content contains dangerous incorrect information that could lead to forthcoming bodily damage, then we're going to take it down. We've taken down loads of hundreds of pieces of misinformation related to Covid-19, consisting of theories like drinking bleach treatment options the virus or that bodily distancing is useless at stopping the sickness from spreading. For other misinformation, once it's far rated false by using reality-checkers, we lessen its distribution, practice caution labels with greater context and find duplicates."

Mr Zuckerberg insists that caution pop-united statesare working, with ninety five% of users deciding on to now not view the content whilst supplied with the labels.

"I suppose this present day step is a superb flow from Facebook and we've seen a much more proactive stance to incorrect information in this pandemic than throughout other situations like the US elections", says Emily Taylor, partner fellow at Chatham House and an professional at social media incorrect information.

"We don't know if it's going to make a massive difference however it is got to be well worth a try due to the fact the distinction among misinformation in a health disaster and an election is actually that lives are at stake," she said.