Twitter will let users report misinformation in new test

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  • The feature, currently only available in the US, Australia, and South Korea, will let people alert the company about ‘fake news’, but won’t lead to more fact-checking
  • The social media site will use the reports to study false information on the platform and identify problem areas to focus on
Bloomberg |
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The new feature by Twitter, available only in a few markets, will let users notify the company about alleged misinformation in the same way they can alert Twitter to spam or abuse. Photo: Dreamstime/TNS

Twitter is adding an option for users to report misinformation to the company, but says the expanded ability to flag tweets won’t necessarily lead to more fact-checking or labels on problematic posts.

The test, only available in a few markets, will let users notify the company about alleged misinformation in the same way they can alert Twitter to spam or abuse. But the social media company, which doesn’t have a robust fact-checking operation, won’t review the legitimacy of each identified tweet or respond to users with updates as it does with other types of reports.

How social media aims to fight misinformation

Instead, Twitter will use the reports as a way to study misinformation on the platform and identify trends or problem areas to focus on, a spokeswoman said. Twitter only fact-checks tweets from select categories, like elections and Covid-19, but users can alert the company to any misinformation. Twitter may add more categories to the fact-checking operation based on the results of the test, which will run in the US, Australia and South Korea.

“We may not take action on and cannot respond to each report in the experiment,” the company tweeted Tuesday from one of its corporate accounts. “But your input will help us identify trends so that we can improve the speed and scale of our broader misinformation work.”

Twitter’s misinformation efforts are more limited than those of competitors, like Facebook. Unlike Facebook’s army of outside fact-checkers, Twitter’s internal Trust and Safety team reviews tweets, and usually just flags the most egregious or highest-profile offenders.

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Those efforts can still have an impact, however. Multiple politicians have been flagged or temporarily suspended for repeated misinformation violations, including former President Donald Trump and most recently, US Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, a state in the south of the country.

Twitter is also building a product called Birdwatch, which will rely on the service’s users to help police content and combat misinformation. That product is just in the testing phase with a small number of users, but is part of an effort to scale fact-checking efforts more quickly. San Francisco-based Twitter has more than 200 million daily users.

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