Who is fact check run by
We apply strong warning labels and notifications on fact-checked content so people can see what our partners have concluded and decide for themselves what to read, trust and share.
As a subsidiary of the journalism research organization Poynter Institute, the IFCN is dedicated to bringing fact-checkers together worldwide. We use a number of signals to predict content that might be misinformation, and surface it to fact-checkers. For example, we use feedback from our users who flag content they see in their News Feed as being potentially false. We also use machine learning models to continuously improve our ability to predict misinformation.
We feed ratings from our fact-checking partners back into this model, so that we get better and better over time at predicting content that could be false. There are several rating options that third-party fact-checkers can apply to content: False Content that has no basis in fact. Altered Image, audio, or video content that has been edited or synthesized beyond adjustments for clarity or quality, in ways that could mislead people.
Partly False Content that has some factual inaccuracies. Missing Context Content that may mislead without additional context. Some of these actions may include:. Reduced Distribution We show the piece of content lower in News Feed, significantly reducing its distribution.
And on Instagram, we remove it from Explore and hashtag pages and downrank content in feed and Stories. Sharing Notifications If someone has shared a story that is later determined by fact-checkers to be false, we notify them that there is additional reporting on that piece of content. Misinformation Labels We apply a clear, visual label to content that has been debunked by fact-checkers, and surface their fact-checking articles for additional context.
Pages, groups, and websites will lose the ability to advertise or monetize within a given time period. Anyone can give us feedback that a story they're seeing in their News Feed might be misinformation. We use this feedback as one signal that helps inform what is sent to fact-checking partners. On Instagram, you may also see them in a Story or a direct message.
These labels link out to an assessment from one of our fact-checking partners, so that you can learn more about how they conducted their reporting. Previously, he worked at the Philadelphia Inquirer , starting as a statehouse reporter in Trenton, N. At the Inquirer , Kiely coordinated coverage of the Amish schoolhouse shooting, honored with a Sigma Delta Chi award for breaking news. He also worked at The Record in Hackensack, N. Kathleen Jamieson, Elizabeth Ware Packard Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, has written extensively on the press, politics and presidential campaigns.
Lori Robertson is a journalist who covered the media for nine years as an editor and writer for American Journalism Review , a bimonthly media watchdog magazine.
Previously, she was the administrative director of the Casey Journalism Center on Children and Families, a resource center for journalists covering at-risk kids. She has written for various publications as a freelancer and is a graduate of Duquesne University with a B. A journalist for more than 23 years, Robert Farley was most recently a reporter at the St. Petersburg Times for more than 13 years. In early , Farley joined PolitiFact. Petersburg Times , and he was part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting.
Previously, he worked a stint on the St. In , Farley won a first place award for general feature writing from the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors for a story about a former girlfriend of rock icon Jim Morrison. Farley has also worked as a reporter at several newspapers in Pennsylvania, including the Harrisburg Patriot-News , the Intelligencer in Doylestown and the Ambler Gazette.
Ben Finley has been a journalist since He graduated with honors from The Ohio State University with a degree in journalism. He previously interned with the Philadelphia Daily News as a copy editor and fact-checker and served as a contributing writer for the Washington Informer covering local news in Washington, D. Ellen Iwamoto Researcher, FactCheck.
Previously, she spent five years as a news editor and copy editor at the Lexington Herald-Leader in Kentucky.
She also works as a freelance editor. Jen McCleary joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in June after six years in academic publishing as a production supervisor and in-house journal cover designer. She earned a B. Undergraduate Fellows, University of Pennsylvania. Past Contributors. Viveca Novak is a journalist who covered politics and government in Washington for more than 20 years, reporting in turn for Common Cause Magazine , National Journal , the Wall Street Journal and Time magazine.
She holds an M. She left FactCheck. Jessica Henig earned her B. The site provides resources designed to help viewers recognize flaws in arguments in general and political ads in particular. Snopes "The definitive Internet reference source for urban legends, folklore, myths, rumors, and misinformation. Duke Reporters' Lab: Fact Checking Includes a database of global fact-checking sites, which can be viewed as a map or as a list; also includes how they identify fact-checkers.
Facebook and Fake News.
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