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Facebook Is Clamping Down On Fake News, Partners With Fact Checkers To Flag Stories (slate.com) 415

After weeks of criticism over its role in spreading fake news during and after the 2016 U.S. Presidential election, Facebook said today it is taking concrete steps to halt the sharing of hoaxes on its platform. From a report on Slate: The company announced on Thursday several new features designed to identify, flag, and slow the spread of false news stories on its platform, including a partnership with third-party fact-checkers such as Snopes and PolitiFact. It is also taking steps to prevent spammers and publishers from profiting from fake news. The new features are relatively cautious and somewhat experimental, which means they may not immediately have the intended effects. But they signal a new direction for a company that has been extremely reticent to take on any editorial oversight of the content posted on its platform. And they are likely to evolve over time as the company tests and refines them. First, it's trying to make it easier for users to report fake news stories. The drop-down menu at the top right of each post in your feed will now include an explicit option to report it as a "fake news story," after which you'll be prompted to choose among multiple options, which include notifying Facebook and messaging the person who shared it.
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Facebook Is Clamping Down On Fake News, Partners With Fact Checkers To Flag Stories

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  • by NotInHere ( 3654617 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @01:55PM (#53491727)

    Just with different rules about what needs to be banned?

    https://yro.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @01:56PM (#53491741) Journal

      And once again, Facebook is a private organization, and has the right to remove any content they want to. Don't like it, go use some other social networking platform.

      Of course, that does mean the fake news purveyors are likely to start losing the large audience they had relied on, but is that such a bad thing? There's always Breitbart and Stormfront!

      • by Bartles ( 1198017 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:01PM (#53491801)

        Maybe we should just have the FCC classify them as a common carrier, and then not allow them to favor any particular communication over another that happens to be transmitted across their network.

        • HAHA good luck getting the FCC do anything beyond frequency management with the new administration.

          • Actually that should be about all that the FCC should be allowed to do. My proposal was kind of tongue in cheek. But hey, if we're going to have net neutrality, lets have net neutrality.

      • Don't like it, go use some other social networking platform.

        That's the digital life equivalent of "let them eat pie". If your friends are all on that platform, you can't say no.

        Your argument also works for china: if you don't like living in china because of its oppression, just move!

      • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:31PM (#53492057) Homepage Journal

        And once again, Facebook is a private organization, and has the right to remove any content they want to. Don't like it, go use some other social networking platform.

        Of course, that does mean the fake news purveyors are likely to start losing the large audience they had relied on, but is that such a bad thing? There's always Breitbart and Stormfront!

        On that note, a Twitter replacement called Gab.ai [gab.ai] has sprung up that claims to enforce free speech.

        It's currently in beta so signups are put on a waiting list, but I managed to get in pretty quick (the wait was less than a week). It's not as sophisticated as Twitter is *currently*, but I really like the free speech aspect of it.

        Speech they don't tolerate [gab.ai] are things that are patently illegal in the US, plus doxing: Illegal pornography, threats and terrorism, and private information.

        If you're bothered by someone, you can set a personal filter to remove their posts from your feed. If you're bothered by certain words, you can set another filter to remove posts with those words.

        Beyond that, they claim that they will make no restrictions on free speech.

        In the 2 months since it started it's become reasonably popular [alexa.com]. According to Alexa rankings, it's currently about the same as Slashdot (after 2 months!).

        ATM gab seems to be under-represented by the left. People are mostly civil, and...

        wonder of wonders... the humour channel is actually funny.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Have you read Twitter's rules? They are identical. Only stuff that is illegal in the US is banned. They stick to those rules too.

          Do these guys offer anything new? Or do you just like them because, as you say, it's a right wing echo chamber?

      • by dnaumov ( 453672 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @03:13PM (#53492361)

        Therein lies the biggest problem with current US free speech legislation. When a bunch of private entities like Google and Facebook hold a near-monopoly on the flow of information, who gives two shits about whether the goverment can censor you? It's the near-monopoly private entities I am most concerned about.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Don't mistake "no one wants to hear your bullshit" for monopoly. There are plenty of sites where you can post pretty much anything, like 8chan, Voat, Stormfront, Breitbart comments etc. It's not a monopoly because they aren't as popular as Google and Facebook, it's just that most people don't want to read to that kind stuff and don't want to be trolled.

    • by Unknown User ( 4795349 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @01:59PM (#53491779)
      Nice trolling. China doesn't do fact checking, they censor. Checking news stories for facts is not censoring but responsible journalism. Whether FB should act as such an editorial filter is another question, but the two things have nothing in common.
    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      Civics 101:

      The US government has a duty to allow for free speech.
      Private and public businesses don't.
      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        They don't have a duty, but you should expect it. Otherwise you're a peasant and the revolution was pointless.

        • by Altus ( 1034 )

          Or you could stop using facebook... but I guess thats just too difficult.

          • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @03:02PM (#53492273) Journal

            The problem for the Alt-right and similar-minded groups outside the US is that services like Facebook and Twitter have very wide distribution, which means their fake news stories can go viral very quickly, for maximum effect. If they're stuck on 4chan, Breitbart and whatever other Internet sewers they usually frequent, about the only thing they're going to be doing is hate-mongering circle jerks. If Facebook is no longer available for them to invent stories about Democrat pedophilia rings, then they're fucked. Thus they protest this a great deal.

        • And if Facebook isn't living up to your expectations, you can stop using it. If Facebook thinks their users will benefit from this fact checking, they'll implement it. If users don't like it, they can complain and hope that Facebook relents or they can flee Facebook and go elsewhere. Nobody's forcing you to stay on Facebook.

          For comparison, you are "forced" to accept the US government by virtue of remaining a citizen of the United States of America. You can't simply say "I'm switching to an alternative gove

      • Once FB statrs censoring "news", they are opening themselves up for legal liability for anything they let by.

        Because it's hard to argue "it's not our fault! It was one of our customers that posted that libelous comment about ***whomever***!" when you're making it your business to censor anything and everything that might get some pol upset.

        Safe Harbor provision?? Doesn't apply once you start censoring things. Yeah, this'll work so well. For the lawyers, at least. It'll get them LOTS of new business..

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 15, 2016 @03:37PM (#53492555)

      Just with different rules

      Rules are very simple.

      I, Big Media, pay you, Big Internet, to flag stories from my competitors in small/indy media as "fake news". You happily oblige, and now your massive audience is automatically redirected via algorithms to my content, and most importantly ads. In effect, Facebook, etc in addition to hosting ads, is now selling wholesaling user eyeballs.

      The fact that I, Big Media, may also be pushing agenda about PedoPizzas or Russian super-hackers on behalf of Big Business or Big Government is entirely secondary the the basic economics underlying this "partnership".

      The mainstream media has had a terrible year. The dialed propaganda up to eleven and went full on hysterical in an effort to get Hillary Clinton elected, and regardless of your opinion on that candidacy, most of us at least recognize that the MSM should probably not have gone to such lengths as sacrificing its own reputation and credibility for Clinton, or Trump, or indeed anything. That's because most of us, on an abstract level, value the concept of an independent Fourth Estate, speaking truth to power and hopefully the rest of us as well. So we're naturally not too pleased to see traditional public institutions very publicly melting down into wide-eyed tin-foil wearers at the first mention of Russian mind controller, or that disgusting frog, or whatever other absurdest nonsense they've focused on today instead of, oh, public policy, or the deficit, or the economy, or well anything that we used to affectionately refer to as news.

      So we turn away. We stop watching. We go somewhere else.

      And they Panic.

      I thought I had seen it all from the Media this year, really. I genuinely felt that after the election, they'd finally learn a lesson, dial it back, and get back to reporting. Or move in that direction. I couldn't have been more wrong. "Fake news". CNN and the NYT want to talk about "Fake News" now? Is this another Russian plot? Or a Trump fascist takeover? A gambit to get Hillary into the White House? No dear reader, no. This is simply far more base, and simple economics.

      Before their (paying) audience implodes -- and it is imploding; the NYT didn't send a mass non-mea-culpa mea-cupla to its entire subscribership without seeing those numbers plummet into the red -- before the readers and viewers migrate on mass to RT, or Info-wars, or (god help us) PBS, Something Must Be Done. A clean up? Better reporting? More, how to put it dignity into the profession? No, too much effort. Just schmooze and/or bribe Google, Facebook, Amazon et al to Lock, Cauterize, Stabilize by any technological means necessary. And all with the blessing of a nervous government and its ever growing, ever more expensive public-private state surveillance partnerships.

      This could be worrying of course. But based on past results, future performance is less likely to resemble Orwell' 1984 as it is Gilliam's Brazil, and of course bankruptcy and government bailout long before that. And there will be a Bailout, mark my words on that. Incompetent as they perform, scorned as they are, laughable as they have become, no modern Government yet dares to step into the Undiscovered Country of a Media-less public landscape. So they will bailout, they will refinance, they will shovel yet more millions from the public Exchequer into the pension funds and golden parachutes of their latest Palace Courtier, down on his luck. I mean it's either that, either that or..... use the Rulebook!.

  • They are threatening to censor half of their customers. I don't think this will end well for them.
    • We'll just slap common carrier status on them, and then they won't have a say.

    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      They'll make more money from reputable customers. I'm sure that Fortune 500 companies can afford to pay more than conspiracy web sites.
      • by Attila Dimedici ( 1036002 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:06PM (#53491857)
        There is nothing in this that says that they are getting rid of all fake news, just the fake news (and not so fake news) that Politifact and Snopes do not like.
        • by gmack ( 197796 )
          Considering I used Snopes to debunk several anti Trump posts(I pretty much annoyed both sides this election).. I don't see that as a problem.
        • by DogDude ( 805747 )
          just the fake news (and not so fake news) that Politifact and Snopes do not like.

          That's a good start. I'm not aware of any "not so fake news" that Politifact and Snopes "do not like".
        • There is nothing in this that says that they are getting rid of all fake news, just the fake news (and not so fake news) that Politifact and Snopes do not like.

          Precisely. The reason that fake news has shot up is that the credibility of the MSM has gone down. Like the current obsession over whether it was Russia that handed over the election to Trump. Never mind that Russian agents would have had to physically have been in a lot of polling places in WI, MI and PA to do what was alleged, since few of those voting machines were directly online.

          Facebook can use what they like, but given that there are enough people who don't believe in the integrity of Politifact

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @04:06PM (#53492773) Homepage Journal

          This is the worst kind if post-truth bullshit. There is no "personal truth", just because you don't like the facts doesn't mean you can simply pick some that better suit you.

          Obviously no one is perfect, but Snopes and PolitiFact do a more than adequate job of basic fact checking. The kind of stuff that would have prevented some idiot going to a pizza restaurant with an automatic rifle. The kind of easily debunked bullshit that the far right lives for.

          • What is interesting is that since the pizzagate incident occurred I have asked the conservatives I know their thoughts about it. None of them had even heard about this "conspiracy", yet most of the liberals I know were fully informed about it even before the gun man went to the pizzeria (which is when I first heard about it). It makes me wonder who is really the target audience of this "fake news."
    • by bfpierce ( 4312717 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:07PM (#53491873)

      Warning labels aren't censorship.

      If you don't want a warning label don't create fake made up shit.

  • Libel law? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by anthony_greer ( 2623521 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:04PM (#53491835)

    If Facebook labels some small time news site as "fake news" would there be a case to be made for defamation if the stories in question were actually factual? For example What about "facts" that are in dispute? Did the Russians hack the DNC or was it an internal leaker who handed the stuff to Wikileaks? One could write an article siting very reputable sources on both sides of that story so which side of that story would be "fake news"

    • Facebook is just a social media site where people could say whatever they wanted (soon to change). If idiots think it is a news site let them, that's the same type of morons who think the tabloid trash rags with alien abductions in them are news.

      snopes vetting stories, hilarious. sometimes they do ok, sometimes they don't.

      Even news sites run fake news, happens here on slashdot all the time. Latest hilarious one was 7-x stellerator story claiming it was "working" and would solve our energy needs. Sorry k

    • If they're in dispute they are not, in fact, 'facts'.

      They're opinion or educated guesses, they can be labeled as such. Maybe this will help the journalists wait until they actually know something before putting trash on the internet.

      Hah, who am I kidding.

      • by rcamans ( 252182 )

        HAH! He said journalists actually know something!. Hilarious!

  • "Fact Checkers" (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Digital Avatar ( 752673 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:07PM (#53491869) Journal
    Are these the same "fact checkers" who told us that Iraq had nuclear weapons?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:08PM (#53491875)

    Fake news or, in other words, a narrative not supported by the State.

  • In the USA a rather significant chunk of their users are pretty hard core Republican Party supporters. And a large number of these people live for false news. Fact checking means nothing to them. One of the ways the right has been able to get false news to spread is by rebuking fact checkers. For example, one person I know simply refuses to believe anything Snopes posts. Why?
    1) Snopes got fooled on something that was a parody which it didn't understand and labeled a hoax. I don't remember exactly w
    • I hope that you are not correct. That's not a future I want to see. I also realize that is a future we are very likely to see. Sooner than later.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I have come to the sad conclusion that in the USA at least we're living in a "post-fact, post-truth" world where it no longer matters if anything is truthful or accurate if enough people believe it.

      Like, "Hillary's gonna win and Trump has no chance," or do you mean like "Bernie lost fair and square"?

      Too many people I know just don't care anymore about whether anything is accurate if it matches up with their political beliefs or attacks those they disagree with.

      Like the anti-Trump protesters in San Jose, Los Angeles, and San Diego, who were assaulting innocent people passing by Trump rallies?

      Wait until a war gets started on a tweet that is a lie.

      Like, "Assad and Russia are butchering civilians and we need to do something to protect them" kind of Tweets?

    • I have come to the sad conclusion that in the USA at least we're living in a "post-fact, post-truth" world where it no longer matters if anything is truthful or accurate if enough people believe it.

      We have always been in a 'post-fact' world. [youtube.com]

    • by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:52PM (#53492205)

      I have come to the sad conclusion that in the USA at least we're living in a "post-fact, post-truth" world where it no longer matters if anything is truthful or accurate if enough people believe it. Too many people I know just don't care anymore about whether anything is accurate if it matches up with their political beliefs or attacks those they disagree with.

      I think somewhere along the line sociopolitical positions (which, IMHO, in the broad center are neither good nor bad, true nor false) began to get pushed using selectively chosen "facts" to make the advocated policy seem as if it, too, was factual in nature. It was a kind of rhetorical persuasion, almost like sales techniques -- "Everybody knows that that less housework makes a wife happy, and the Vacuum2000 really reduces housework. If you won't buy one, ask yourself why you want an unhappy wife."

      Anyway, I think this began to highlight a conceptual difference between truth and facts. I would argue that nearly every thing that is *true* is made up of a constellation of related facts. Cherry-picking facts allows you to manufacture a truth, but when that truth diverges significantly from reality it causes a cognitive dissonance, and people generally tend to side with the truth most closely aligned with their perceived reality.

      I think this has led us to the point where people ignore facts -- too often they're not used to try to accurately describe a perceived truth, but to create a truth.

      I think globalism is probably a great example. Lots of people using facts to advocate for it as embodying the ideal outcome, yet for millions of people, despite the facts that seem to support it, see their life undermined by globalism -- jobs moved away, problems with immigrants, and so on. Do you believe the facts or the truth around you?

      (And I'm not meaning to take a position on globalism. I'm sure the benefits of trade are great, but they're poorly distributed. Cultural diversity is nice, in a Disney Epcot way, but I think humans generally do poorly when they hold divergent views on many topics, and the results are usually ugly at best or grinding warfare at worst).

  • by nyri ( 132206 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:21PM (#53491985)

    This is bad news as these fact checkers have proven to be just as biased as any other news souce such sa MSNBC or Fox News. They are fake authorities to decide what is true and what is not. This will lead to ever more tighter group think in the left leaning segments of the society while the right leaning segments will get alienated even further by what they call "mainstream media" institutions. It only takes one false positive identification of "fake news" to discredit this as cencorship by any right leaning person. (And trust me, the bias is there, so the false positive is something that will annoy right leaning people, not left leaning.)

    In short: Don't do it. Please. Instead try to work it so that people get exposed to other points of views.

  • If I may point out (Score:5, Insightful)

    by H3lldr0p ( 40304 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:35PM (#53492091) Homepage

    that our issues with factual discourse have little to do with the quality of the news and everything to do with the ability to synthesize information into emotional & cognitive context.

    That is to say, it doesn't matter if you tell someone who is pro-war that their country is murdering children. This hypothetical individual is effectively immune from this fact through a combination of propaganda and cognitive biases. It doesn't matter that in all other circumstances this hypothetical individual screams, "Won't someone think about the children", you will not be able to break through to them. At least not directly.

    What we are seeing in the US. What we have been experiencing for about 30 years now, is a confluence of certain philosophical positions coming together. In the last couple of days I had it pointed out to me something that should have been far more obvious. There are a lot of my fellow citizens that live by the Just World Hypothesis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just-world_hypothesis/ [wikipedia.org]. Combine this with our friend the Prosperity Gospel, and I think you can contextualize so much of the past year.

    Given this, we cannot attack the problem directly. Because the problem isn't fake news. The problem is an inability to connect one's actions to the world at large. And I feel that this disconnection is due to a massive amount of wishful thinking. The wishful thought that everything will work itself out. The wishful thought that you get what you deserve. The wishful thought that your one vote doesn't make a difference.

    To get around this, we need people to understand that the world doesn't just exist in their household, their neighborhood, or just their town. That we are acting and operating on a global level these days. The world is simultaneously larger and smaller than it has been ever before. It does matter if you choose to get a fuel-efficient three or four cylinder car vs the monstrous SUV because within your lifetime people will be displaced because of that choice. How fast that happens depends on what you choose. You are a part of that chain, whether or not you want to be. And it is up to you to stay current with how you impact things. Even in the smallest, out of the way place in the middle of no-where. This choice makes a difference. And each day, going forward has to be a learn-unlearn-relearn process.

  • Except bias (Score:2, Insightful)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 )

    1) any system allowing people to flag things as false news will be bias driven. "Oh, it says X is a liar, that's not true, so (flag)"!

    2) Snopes? http://dailycaller.com/2016/06... [dailycaller.com]

    • Re:Except bias (Score:4, Insightful)

      by bfpierce ( 4312717 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:49PM (#53492181)

      1.) Dailycaller (lmao)

      I'd be much more interested if it was an article about how snopes did a poor job of fact checking. Instead it's a big ol cry fest about how she's a liberal. Read: I don't give a shit if the job is getting done correctly.

  • by Hylandr ( 813770 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:43PM (#53492151)

    Finally maybe we will start to see the decline of Facebook.

    I see no way how this could be abused.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 15, 2016 @02:51PM (#53492203)

    Snopes? Politifact? Facebook? .... REALLY? ..... these are all Democrat-aligned entities staffed primarily by Democrats/Socialists whose political contributions and editorials are all favorable to Democrats, so much so that about a year ago Facebook realized that they, as a corporation, were having trouble even communicating with conservatives. Even now, Google is trying to hire people who know some Republicans/Conserrvatives/Libertarians because they have few contacts with such people and need to figure out how to relate to them with Democrats out of power in DC starting in late January.

    The people who were all cuddly with Team Hillary, and eagerly parroted all the fake news her campaign and supporters shoveled..... the people who spent the past year providing fake polls showing Trump could not win, and fake news about how "open" Hillary was while she never held a single actual press conference through an entire presidential cycle, and fake news about the greatness of the economy and employment (as Obama became the first US President in history to never manage to create a single quarter of growth of at least 3% and pushed the labor participation rate down to levels only matched by Jimmy Carter in the 1970s) .... THOSE HYPER-DISHONEST and HYPER-PARTISAN freaks are going to censor your news?????????

     

    They are just doubling-down n their Democrat activism. They are going to become unabashed propagandists who will make the communications of the 3rd Reich look amateurish. Anything that is critical of Democrats or of these Democrat-aligned internet entities will be labelled "fake news" and their users will be encouraged to ignore any of this contrary communication. This is a continuation of the 8-year long Obama rants against Fox News and the left-wing meme that the only news outlet not kissing Obama's posterior was "Faux News" and is unprecedented in our history (previous presidents complained about their coverage, but they did not label particular news outlets as "fake" from the white house podium).

  • CNN (Score:2, Troll)

    by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

    I've been busy flagging the specious content-free claims on my feed, and it's working. I'm no longer seeing many CNN or Snopes links on my feed.

    • I've found most of the "alt-right" fake news sites all seem to have the same click-bait adds, so I click the adds and if the throw a pop-up I report them to my anti-virus as mallware sites; most of the are listed on Facebook with the "Sponsored Site" tag so I'm suspicious that reporting them to Facebook would be futile.

  • by Sir_Eptishous ( 873977 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @03:12PM (#53492351)
    I've been around a while, voted in several elections and have been an avid consumer of news, current events and history since I was in grammar school.
    If there is one thing I've noticed down through the years, it is that Conservatives(and especially alt-right/tea party types) really don't like fact checking.

    They will use any number of rhetorical ploys, misdirection, hyperbole, etc to "blur" and obfuscate the facts.
    In my experience I have noticed that as soon as the word "fact" gets brought up in a conversation, whether on or offline, conservatives start to squirm and almost universally have an instant gut reaction of disdain. They equate "facts" as something that those liberal elite scientist/academia types use to rationally take apart their ill conceived FB memes. This is strange to me, because I would assume that someone with a very passionate opinion about something would want things fact checked and corroborated.

    Now this behavior is not universal with conservatives, as I know a guy who is a conservative, is very bright, and we are actually friends, though we disagree on politics. When we are around each other we calmly discuss our differences regarding politics, but it never gets heated or personal. He is all about facts and following an empirical method, etc;

    Another Example:
    I have a co-worker who has a degree in meteorology, and worked at a climate center at a major university. He is also a conservative Republican that would agree with most statements and opinions put out by Republicans, especially on social issues. One day at work we were discussing the weather as we always do, how it is warmer now than it was 10 or 20 years ago(the discussion was purely anecdotal, we weren't pulling up NOAA data). Someone then asked "what do you think about climate change? Is it real? Is it caused by people?" His answer didn't surprise me, because I know how smart this guy is. He said "climate change is completely backed up by the facts and the scientific evidence, and yes, it is very likely that the carbon put into the atmosphere is the cause". Then he went on to couch all that he had said in apolitical back-peddling sort of self-editing, so as not to offend those in earshot who are of the anti-fact mindset(which I found very humorous!)

    Keep in mind this is just an example, but one that shows that not all conservatives are anti-fact, or anti-empirical-method or anti-corroboration.
    Just most of them.
  • by RhettLivingston ( 544140 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @03:33PM (#53492529) Journal

    Wasted effort.

    I recently stumbled on this article from 2014 [vox.com] that really nails the source of our recent issues and explains why even if all of our news perfectly matched the facts we'd still have the same disagreements. Just get past your reactions to the title and read the contents.

    Humans are poor reasoners. We can talk ourselves into any position, often looking at the same facts as those with an opposite position and especially when identifying with a group that holds positions.

    The only way past the bias is education directed toward how to think as opposed to what are the facts. That will never happen because all sides of the system thrive on this human vulnerability.

  • by jtara ( 133429 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @04:10PM (#53492813)

    Facebook has no news. Just BS and trivia posted by members to keep themselves amused and acquire some sort of brownie points from their friends who keep themselves amused by posting BS and trivia.

    Facebook needs to realize that they have no role in disseminating news. Their users are not reporters, not even "iReporters" or whatnot. They are just you and me (well, not ME, smart enough not to have Facebook...) giving our opinions and our filtered, inaccurate interpretation of whatever real new sources we may still pay attention to, along with made-up BS and links to made-up BS.

    And the occasional accidental link to real news. I suppose for the benefit of those that refuse to pay any attention to real news any more, and prefer to have it filtered and summarized by their so-called friends (all thousands of them!)

  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Friday December 16, 2016 @12:49AM (#53495569) Homepage Journal

    So, essentially arms of the Democratic news machine are being used to determine "fake news".

    Never mind that BOTH organizations have been cause in their OWN fake news scandals, and in alarming displays of partisanship.

    Yeah. Fuck that noise.

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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