Social media can easily be summed up as one of the greatest
innovations of the century. It has
affected lives and organisations immensely, and in many positive ways. But on the flipside it has in various instances become a cesspool of the propagation of untruths that have led to untold mass hysteria, agony, human suffering, financial loss and even death.
affected lives and organisations immensely, and in many positive ways. But on the flipside it has in various instances become a cesspool of the propagation of untruths that have led to untold mass hysteria, agony, human suffering, financial loss and even death.
The internet opened up new easier ways
of harming others and perpetrating all manner of vices. Apparently,
anonymity plays a role in breeding negative online interactions, from
cyber harassment to identify theft, to fake news.
Manufacturing
of falsehoods disguised as news material has become a core part of
media consumption, especially as more and more people look to social
media for news and information.
While the
Communications Authority of Kenya and the National Cohesion and
Integration Commission have co-authored rules to help combat the
distribution of such information with a Sh1 million fine or five-year
jail term for offenders, global social media companies are joining in
the process to stem circulation of fake news on their sites.
A
study by Portland and GeoPoll in 2017 about Kenya’s consumption of news
found that at least half of those in the study relied on social media
for their news. In relation to the upcoming polls, it revealed that 90
per cent of Kenyans had heard or seen false stories related to the
elections. In the survey, a cross section of the population including
official groups, friends, and families told researchers they had all
used social media to spread the misinformation. Government agencies have
themselves been exposed for sharing fake news as it has popularly come
to be known.
Unlike real-life harassment, the cloak of facelessness and
obscurity that digital media provides offenders as well as the swiftness
with which gossip, rumours and photos or other information, whether
true or made up, can be spread, with the intention of humiliating,
hurting or defaming a target, makes the internet a monster that needs
taming for those who have been victims.
Social media
giants like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Whatsapp, Youtube, Snapchat
have in recent times all come under increasing pressure to stop the
spread of false information.
And the pressure is
bearing fruit with giants Facebook, Google and Twitter recently
announcing they were entering into collaboration with third-party
fact-checking organisations like Africa-check to identify stories that
fail to hold up to scrutiny, and warn users when they try to post or
share these stories.
In Kenya, tech firms Google and
Facebook announced they were investing millions to combat cyber bullying
like targeted rumours, threats and making sexual remarks that target
children and youth.
Just last week, Google committed
Sh100 million to firms that promote safe internet use by focusing on
internet privacy, trust and safety across Africa.
Google
made the commitment to enhance cyber security during the launch of an
internet-based literacy website for children dubbed Be Internet Awesome.
Google Kenya’s local partners include the Ministry of Education, Kenya
Institute of Curriculum Development, Ministry of Youth and ICT, Youth
Technology Foundation, Kabarak University, Pawa IT, Communications
Authority and Kenya Scouts Association.
“We can't do it
alone. We know that the best answers often come from those closest to
the problem - from civil society organisations and nonprofit innovators
who understand the needs of vulnerable populations in their own
communities,” said Google Kenya Country Director, Charles Murito.
“That's
why we are launching a pan-African $1 million fund to support
innovative project ideas by nonprofits and social enterprises around
digital literacy and online safety of children, young people and
families.”
Google
which has more than 250 million users across the globe has to date
partnered with 15 local government agencies and non-profit organisations
to scale up internet safety and security awareness amongst children and
youth in the country.
Facebook on the other hand
recently announced its partnership with nine organisations across Africa
including Kenya’s Watoto Watch to ensure that its social media
platforms are safe for use by children.
“We're
committed to ensuring Facebook and Instagram are safe places for
everyone, especially the youth,” said Strategic Media Partnerships
Manager for Facebook in sub-Saharan Africa, Jocelyne Muhutu-Rémy.
“That’s
why we offer a range of tools on our platforms to give people full
control over their experience, and work with our partners to drive
awareness about the practices, resources and tools people can use to
protect their online wellbeing.”
Last year, Facebook
Inc and the news agency Reuters, announced that they had reached an
agreement to fact-check content posted on Facebook and its photo-sharing
app Instagram. The US pilot project is meant to detect misinformation
faster.
The two firms explained that a newly created
unit at Reuters will fact-check user-generated photos, videos, headlines
and other content for Facebook’s US audience. This is being done for
both English and Spanish language posts.
The
partnership brings to eight the number of fact-checking partners in the
United States, most of which are media-related outlets. It has widely
been alleged that misinformation and disinformation on social media
played a dominant role in Kenya’s chaotic 2017 elections.
Facebook,
in particular has come under severe pressure for driving fake news on
its platform ahead of the key presidential elections. But Facebook boss
Mark Zuckerberg has been on record saying that it was not up to social
media sites like his to determine what amounts to abuse of social media.
He called for more regulation of harmful online content by authorities.
Facebook,
which has 2.45 billion monthly active users around the world, has
recently come under intense criticism as US intelligence agencies
accused it of being at the heart of a Russian cyber-influence campaign
aimed at interfering in the 2016 US election – a claim Moscow has
denied.
The same claims were made in Kenya’s own
presidential elections in which Cambridge Analytica, the same data
analysis firm accused around the world of using data gathered from
Facebook users to spread fake news, psychological manipulation and
entrapment techniques through social media to influence especially young
voters. It was the same group used in the 2016 US presidential election
and the Brexit referendum.
According to a report by
Nigerian e-commerce platform Jumia released in 2017, 67 percent of
Kenyans were internet users. And the country has approximately 7 million
Facebook users.
Speaking at the Munich Security
Conference in Germany on February 15 Mr Zuckerberg urged governments to
formulate new regulatory systems for social media, suggesting it should
be a mix of existing rules for telecoms and media companies. Mr
Zuckerberg also admitted Facebook had been slow to recognise the
development of co-ordinated online "information campaigns" by state
actors looking to spread propaganda.
He added that malevolent actors are also becoming better at covering their tracks by masking the IP addresses of users.
"In the absence of that kind of regulation we will continue doing our best," he said at the conference according to the BBC.
Since
the last two years, the company has launched new policies for political
advertising globally, requiring political ads to display who paid for
them, and consequently keeping a copy of the ad in a publicly-searchable
database for seven years.
Facebook has also said it
will not include sponsored political posts by social media stars in its
database. The BBC reported that posts by politicians are not always
fact-checked as part of the company's free speech policy. To tackle
this, Mr Zuckerberg said Facebook had a team of 35,000 people reviewing
content and security on the platform. With assistance from AI, he said
more than a million fake accounts are deleted every day.
"Our
budget (for content review) is bigger today than the whole revenue of
the company when we went public in 2012, when we had a billion users,"
he said.
Twitter has also opened warfare against the
spread of falsehoods with new guidelines for Twitter users to be able to
flag and counter fake information. Last year, it announced plans seek
input from around the globe on how it will address synthetic and
manipulated media.
It has hence announced a set of
rules that will guide use of the platform and said that starting March 5
2020, it would begin to apply a label, remove information, pictures,
audio and videos it finds to have been doctored for the sake of
misinforming audiences.
The micro-blogging site has also moved to ban accounts known for persistently spreading conspiracy theories.
Twitter
said in a statement published on its blog by Head of Site Integrity,
Yoel Roth and Group Product Manager, Ashita Achuthan that the company
would henceforth, “Show a warning to people before they Retweet or like
the Tweet (considered to carry false information), reduce the visibility
of the Tweet on Twitter and/or prevent it from being recommended,
provide additional explanations or clarifications, as available, such as
a landing page with more context.”
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