Facebook (FB.O) is to send more potential hoax
articles to third-party fact checkers and show
their findings below the original post, the
world's largest online social network said on
Thursday as it tries to fight so-called fake
news.
The company said in a statement on its website
it will start using updated machine learning to
detect possible hoaxes and send them to fact
checkers, potentially showing fact-checking
results under the original article.
Facebook has been criticized as being one of
the main distribution points for so-called fake
news, which many think influenced the 2016
U.S. presidential election.
The issue has also become a big political topic
in Europe, with French voters deluged with false
stories ahead of the presidential election in May
and Germany backing a plan to fine social
media networks if they fail to remove hateful
postings promptly, ahead of elections there in
September.
On Thursday Facebook said in a separate
statement in German that a test of the new
fact-checking feature was being launched in the
United States, France, the Netherlands and
Germany.
"In addition to seeing which stories are
disputed by third-party fact checkers, people
want more context to make informed decisions
about what they read and share," said Sara Su,
Facebook news feed product manager, in a
blog.
She added that Facebook would keep testing its
"related article" feature and work on other
changes to its news feed to cut down on false
news.