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Instagram will let 3rd parties fact check your memes

The tech giants want to be the sole arbiters of truth.

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Facebook-owned Instagram is now limiting the distribution of posts that its fact-checking partners label as โ€œfalse.โ€ Posts that are deemed to be โ€œfalseโ€ will be scrubbed from Instagramโ€™s Explore tab and its hashtag results pages โ€“ two of the main ways Instagram users discover posts from accounts that theyโ€™re not following.

Facebook currently has 52 fact-checking partners in over 30 countries and these fact-checkers have been labeling posts โ€œfalseโ€ on Facebook since December 2016. If they rate a link, image, or video โ€œfalseโ€:

  • Its reach in the Facebook News Feed is decreased
  • A context button may appear that provides more fact-checker approved information on the topic
  • Users that try to share the content receive a warning saying that the information is false before they can share it

Additionally, pages and groups that consistently share information that has been labeled as โ€œfalseโ€ can have all their content demoted and be prohibited from using Facebookโ€™s advertising and monetization products.

Now Poynter is reporting that a similar fact-checking program will be rolling out on Instagram this week which uses the same 52 fact-checking partners.

According to Stephanie Otway, a spokeswoman for Instagram, โ€œpotentially falseโ€ photos and memes will start being sent to the dashboard used by Facebookโ€™s fact-checking partners. From here, fact-checkers will then be able to debunk what they deem to be misinformation and label it as โ€œfalse.โ€

If an Instagram post is rated โ€œfalse,โ€ it will be removed from the Explore tab and its hashtag results pages. This means posts labeled as โ€œfalseโ€ will lose most of their organic distribution on Instagram and only be visible to followers of an account, users that visit the accountโ€™s profile page directly, or users that receive a direct link to the post.

Unlike Facebookโ€™s fact-checking system, there will be no warnings or labels that indicate specific Instagram posts have been labeled as โ€œfalseโ€ by fact-checking partners. The posts will be presented to users in the same way as posts without this label.

However, Instagram is considering adding โ€œmisinformation warningsโ€ in other areas such as pop-ups that will appear when people search for anti-vaccine information.

Otway suggested that artificial intelligence (AI) will be used to automatically reduce the distribution of posts that have been labeled โ€œfalseโ€ by fact-checkers:

โ€œWe can use image recognition technology to find the same piece of content on Instagram and take automatic action.โ€

Otway didnโ€™t say why Instagram started developing this fact-checking system but said Instagram has been working on it since the US midterm elections in 2018. This indicates that itโ€™s part of Facebookโ€™s wider efforts to stop the spread of what it deems to misinformation on the platform in the run-up to the 2020 US presidential elections.

One concerning aspect of this new Instagram fact-checking system is that according to Poynter, all of Facebookโ€™s fact-checking partners must be signatories of Poynterโ€™s International Fact-Checking Network code of principles. Poynter recently published a report which tried to get 29 conservative news websites blacklisted by advertisers.

While Poynter did remove this report after facing heavy backlash, the fact that it even published the report raises serious questions about the organizationโ€™s political neutrality and whether it can be trusted to fact-check political content on Instagram without being biased against conservatives.

This new Instagram fact-checking system is being rolled out at a time when Facebook is also facing controversy for being biased against conservatives.

Last week, political commentators Alex Jones, Paul Joseph Watson, Laura Loomer, and Milo Yiannopoulos were permanently banned from Facebook and Instagram as part of a coordinated campaign with the media. On the same day, Facebook also banned sharing and linking to Infowars content.

Infowars and the people who were banned are all high profile supporters of President Trump and created pro-Trump content that was viewed millions of times on Facebook during the 2016 presidential campaign.

Many leading political commentators are interpreting these actions by Facebook as politically motivated censorship against Trumpโ€™s 2020 campaign.

Paul Joseph Watson replying to President Trump on Twitter and accusing Facebook of election meddling.
Source: Twitter โ€“ @realDonaldTrump and @PrisonPlanet
Allum Bokhari suggesting that Facebookโ€™s censorship will suppress the voices of President Trumpโ€™s online supporters.
Source: Twitter โ€“ @LibertarianBlue
Donald Trump Jr. suggesting that the censorship by Facebook, Twitter, and Google is politically motivated and related to the 2020 US presidential elections.
Source: Twitter โ€“ @DonaldJTrumpJr

The announcement of Instagramโ€™s new-fact checking system comes less than a week after these Facebook bans and the publication of the Poynter report targeting conservative websites. While Instagram may be positioning this new fact-checking program as a way to cut down on the spread of misinformation, the timing of its roll out and the involvement of Poynter is likely to add to the concerns conservatives already have about Facebook and political censorship in the run-up to the 2020 US presidential elections.