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USA thrash Sweden to reach Olympic women's ice hockey final
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Russian poisonings aim to kill -- and send a message
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France's Macron eyes fighter jet deal in India
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Arsenal to face third-tier Mansfield, Newcastle host Man City in FA Cup
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Robert Duvall: understated actor's actor, dead at 95
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'How long?': Day Three of hunger strike for Venezuelan political prisoners' release
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'Godfather' and 'Apocalypse Now' actor Robert Duvall dead at 95
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Grief-stricken McGrath left in shock at Olympic slalom failure
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England match-winner Jacks proud, confident heading into Super Eights
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St Peter's Basilica gets terrace cafe, translated mass for 400th birthday
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St Peter's Basilica gets terrace cafe for 400th anniversary
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Meillard extends Swiss Olympic strangehold while Gu aims for gold
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Meillard crowns Swiss men's Olympic domination with slalom gold
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German carnival revellers take swipes at Putin, Trump, Epstein
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England survive Italy scare to reach T20 World Cup Super Eights
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Gold rush grips South African township
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'Tehran' TV series producer Dana Eden found dead in Athens
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Iran FM in Geneva for US talks, as Guards begin drills in Hormuz Strait
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Sakamoto fights fatigue, Japanese rivals and US skaters for Olympic women's gold
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'Your success is our success,' Rubio tells Orban ahead of Hungary polls
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Spain unveils public investment fund to tackle housing crisis
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African diaspora's plural identities on screen in Berlin
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Del Toro wins shortened UAE Tour first stage
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German carnival revellers take sidesweep at Putin, Trump, Epstein
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Killing of far-right activist stokes tensions in France
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Record Jacks fifty carries England to 202-7 in must-win Italy match
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European stocks, dollar up in subdued start to week
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African players in Europe: Salah hailed after Liverpool FA Cup win
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Taiwan's cycling 'missionary', Giant founder King Liu, dies at 91
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Kyrgyzstan president fires ministers, consolidates power ahead of election
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McGrath tops Olympic slalom times but Braathen out
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Greenland's west coast posts warmest January on record
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South Africa into Super Eights without playing as Afghanistan beat UAE
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Madagascar cyclone death toll rises to 59
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ByteDance vows to boost safeguards after AI model infringement claims
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Smith added to Australia T20 squad, in line for Sri Lanka crunch
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Australian museum recovers Egyptian artefacts after break-in
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India forced to defend US trade deal as doubts mount
Disinformation experts slam Meta decision to end US fact-checking
Tech giant Meta's shock announcement to end its US fact-checking program triggered scathing criticism Tuesday from disinformation researchers who warned it risked opening the floodgates for proliferating false narratives.
Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg announced the company was going to "get rid" of its third-party fact-checkers in the United States, in a sweeping policy shift that analysts saw as an attempt to appease US President-elect Donald Trump.
"This is a major step back for content moderation at a time when disinformation and harmful content are evolving faster than ever," said Ross Burley, co-founder of the nonprofit Centre for Information Resilience.
Fact-checking and disinformation research have long been a hot-button issue in a hyperpolarized political climate in the United States, with conservative US advocates saying they were a tool to curtail free speech and censor right-wing content.
Trump's Republican Party and his billionaire ally Elon Musk -- the owner of social media giant X, formerly Twitter -- have long echoed similar complaints.
"While efforts to protect free expression are vital, removing fact-checking without a credible alternative risks opening the floodgates to more harmful narratives," Burley said.
"This move seems more about political appeasement than smart policy."
As an alternative, Zuckerberg said Meta's platforms, Facebook and Instagram, would use "Community Notes similar to X" in the United States.
Community Notes is a crowd-sourced moderation tool that X has promoted as the way for users to add context to posts, but researchers have repeatedly questioned its effectiveness in combating falsehoods.
"You wouldn't rely on just anyone to stop your toilet from leaking, but Meta now seeks to rely on just anyone to stop misinformation from spreading on their platforms," Michael Wagner, from the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told AFP.
"Asking people, pro bono, to police the false claims that get posted on Meta's multi-billion dollar social media platforms is an abdication of social responsibility."
- 'Politics, not policy' -
Meta's new approach ignores research that shows "Community Notes users are very much motivated by partisan motives and tend to over-target their political opponents," said Alexios Mantzarlis, director of the Security, Trust, and Safety Initiative at Cornell Tech.
Meta's announcement represents a financial setback for its US-based third-party fact-checkers.
Meta's program and external grants have been "predominant revenue streams" for global fact-checkers, according to a 2023 survey by the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) of 137 organizations across dozens of countries.
The decision will also "hurt social media users who are looking for accurate, reliable information to make decisions about their everyday lives and interactions," said IFCN director Angie Holan.
"It's unfortunate that this decision comes in the wake of external political pressure from a new administration and its supporters," Holan added.
Aaron Sharockman, executive director of US fact-checking organization PolitiFact, disagreed with the contention that fact-checking was a tool to suppress free speech.
The role of US fact-checkers, he said, was to provide "additional speech and context to posts that journalists found to contain misinformation" and it was up to Meta to decide what penalties users faced.
"The great thing about free speech is that people are able to disagree about any piece of journalism we post," Sharockman said.
"If Meta is upset it created a tool to censor, it should look in the mirror."
PolitiFact is one of the early partners who worked with Facebook to launch the fact-checking program in the United States in 2016.
AFP also currently works in 26 languages with Facebook's fact-checking program, in which Facebook pays to use fact-checks from around 80 organizations globally on its platform, WhatsApp and on Instagram.
In that program, content rated "false" is downgraded in news feeds so fewer people will see it and if someone tries to share that post, they are presented with an article explaining why it is misleading.
"The program was by no means perfect, and fact-checkers have no doubt erred in some percentage of their labels," Mantzarlis said.
"But we should be clear that Zuckerberg's promise of getting rid of fact-checkers was a choice of politics, not policy."
S.F.Warren--AMWN