With a number of upcoming elections across Africa, social
media giant, Facebook, has restated its commitment to reduce the spread of
misinformation, protect election integrity and support civic engagement across
the continent, including Nigeria.
The social media platform has in recent times
dedicated unprecedented resources to these efforts globally, especially in
Africa where its efforts have been focused in eight key areas, namely: fighting
false news, boosting digital literacy to help people spot false news, promoting
civic engagement, making political ads more transparent, proactive removal of
impersonation accounts and connecting with political parties about security. It
has also undertaken the training of journalists on practices for sharing content
on its platforms, while partnerships with NGOs and civil society groups on the
continent.
Facebook’s Public Policy Manager, Africa Elections,
Akua Gyekye, on Tuesday, said: “We want to stop the spread of false news on our platforms.
That’s why we’ve teamed up with local third-party fact-checkers across South
Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Cameroon and Senegal, including Africa Check, AFP
(Agence France-Presse), Pesa Check (a local Kenyan fact-checking organisation)
and Dubawa (a local Nigerian fact-checking organisation). These independent
groups help us assess the accuracy of news shared on Facebook, and when they
determine that content is false, we reduce its distribution in News Feed so
fewer people could see it. We also show related articles from fact-checkers for
more context and notify users if a story they have shared is rated as false.”
Additionally, in Nigeria, Whatsapp has worked with
Africa Check and CrossCheck Nigeria to let users send questions about potential
rumours they have received through the platform.
These fact-checking expansions are part of a
broader strategy to fight fake news that includes extensive work to remove fake
accounts, cut off incentives to the financially-motivated actors that spread
misinformation, promote news literacy, and give more context so that people can
decide for themselves what to read, trust and share.
It was also gathered that Facebook had also
intensified efforts help people spot false news on their own and to flag it,
rolling out educational tips on national and regional radio and in print media
across Nigeria, South Africa, Zambia, Kenya and Zimbabwe.
In Nigeria, Whatsapp has launched its ‘Share Facts,
Not Rumours’ campaign to help increase awareness about hoaxes. Additionally, at
the end of last year, Facebook began a new Online Safety Programme for students
in Nigerian secondary schools. The 12-week workshop was designed to help
teenagers understand the fundamentals of online safety and digital literacy,
covering topics such as managing an online presence; social media and sharing;
public Wi-Fi safety; building healthy relationships online; understanding
password security and privacy settings, and identifying misinformation online.
According to Facebook, it is also promoting civic
engagement around the elections.
“Helping to build informed and civically engaged communities
is central to our work around elections. In Nigeria, we’ve rolled out new
options in English and Hausa so that people can report posts that contain
incorrect election information, encourage violence or otherwise violate our
Community Standards. On election day, we’ll show a voting day reminder in
English and Hausa at the top of Facebook’s News Feed,” Gyekye said.
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