Facebook changing how it identifies fake news' stories

The company says that it is changing way how it identifies fake news stories on its platform to a more effective system.

Update: 2017-12-22 01:57 GMT
Together with an existing office in Berlin, Facebook will have more than 1,200 people reviewing posts in Germany by the end of the year.

Facebook says it is changing how it identifies ‘fake news’ stories on its platform to a more effective system.

The social-media network had put ‘disputed’ labels on stories that fact-checkers found false. Instead, now it will bring up ‘related articles’ next to the false stories that give context to fact-checkers on the stories’ problems.

Facebook said on December 20 that in its tests, fewer hoax articles were shared when they had fact-checkers’ articles spooled up next to them than when they were labelled with ‘disputed’ flags.

The new approach also may help speed up the fact-checking system, which sometimes worked too slowly. Now information from just one checker can be shown next to the false story. The labelling system required two fact-checkers.

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