The Prague Post - X's 'Community Notes': a model for Meta?

EUR -
AED 4.177115
AFN 81.881407
ALL 99.252011
AMD 444.59148
ANG 2.049629
AOA 1037.159602
ARS 1294.14051
AUD 1.780172
AWG 2.047025
AZN 1.937816
BAM 1.956825
BBD 2.294803
BDT 138.092365
BGN 1.957857
BHD 0.428625
BIF 3332.101328
BMD 1.137236
BND 1.492134
BOB 7.854392
BRL 6.605299
BSD 1.136596
BTN 97.022843
BWP 15.66621
BYN 3.71968
BYR 22289.824581
BZD 2.282996
CAD 1.574122
CDF 3271.828234
CHF 0.930817
CLF 0.028662
CLP 1099.88957
CNY 8.306268
CNH 8.306019
COP 4901.486936
CRC 571.199327
CUC 1.137236
CUP 30.136753
CVE 110.77121
CZK 25.063093
DJF 202.11002
DKK 7.466603
DOP 68.807192
DZD 150.758867
EGP 58.143353
ERN 17.058539
ETB 151.279275
FJD 2.59711
FKP 0.855951
GBP 0.857288
GEL 3.116471
GGP 0.855951
GHS 17.695835
GIP 0.855951
GMD 81.31675
GNF 9843.350125
GTQ 8.754588
GYD 238.429138
HKD 8.827817
HNL 29.46444
HRK 7.519522
HTG 148.317723
HUF 408.38716
IDR 19177.096068
ILS 4.189521
IMP 0.855951
INR 97.094367
IQD 1489.779092
IRR 47906.064711
ISK 145.100373
JEP 0.855951
JMD 179.644139
JOD 0.806646
JPY 161.682017
KES 147.276378
KGS 99.205077
KHR 4566.00273
KMF 492.996098
KPW 1023.51235
KRW 1613.044532
KWD 0.348711
KYD 0.947196
KZT 594.971784
LAK 24598.413953
LBP 101896.34134
LKR 339.937138
LRD 227.418803
LSL 21.444738
LTL 3.357963
LVL 0.687903
LYD 6.221113
MAD 10.547908
MDL 19.662304
MGA 5177.713287
MKD 61.514233
MMK 2387.450153
MNT 4055.721375
MOP 9.086962
MRU 44.847502
MUR 51.278399
MVR 17.517685
MWK 1974.241998
MXN 22.428272
MYR 5.012372
MZN 72.675107
NAD 21.444738
NGN 1824.926761
NIO 41.821916
NOK 11.919455
NPR 155.236349
NZD 1.916394
OMR 0.437833
PAB 1.136596
PEN 4.279463
PGK 4.700463
PHP 64.495498
PKR 319.112616
PLN 4.278742
PYG 9097.767521
QAR 4.140226
RON 4.978937
RSD 117.291464
RUB 93.451578
RWF 1609.188866
SAR 4.267179
SBD 9.516785
SCR 16.196165
SDG 682.914367
SEK 10.955779
SGD 1.490626
SHP 0.893689
SLE 25.900592
SLL 23847.250746
SOS 649.934509
SRD 42.248737
STD 23538.488054
SVC 9.945212
SYP 14786.177003
SZL 21.403201
THB 37.92345
TJS 12.206811
TMT 3.980326
TND 3.398104
TOP 2.663525
TRY 43.355779
TTD 7.712041
TWD 36.987505
TZS 3056.325739
UAH 47.101683
UGX 4166.329832
USD 1.137236
UYU 47.664978
UZS 14768.739292
VES 91.955341
VND 29420.293975
VUV 137.567375
WST 3.158108
XAF 656.312471
XAG 0.034868
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.073437
XDR 0.816192
XOF 653.911048
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.907529
ZAR 21.425938
ZMK 10236.492294
ZMW 32.36396
ZWL 366.189511
  • RIO

    1.0100

    58.17

    +1.74%

  • NGG

    0.6300

    72.11

    +0.87%

  • RBGPF

    63.5900

    63.59

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.82

    +0.18%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    42.37

    +1.27%

  • SCS

    0.0500

    9.76

    +0.51%

  • GSK

    0.5600

    35.93

    +1.56%

  • BP

    0.6600

    28.32

    +2.33%

  • RELX

    1.0000

    52.2

    +1.92%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    21.96

    +0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    9.36

    -1.5%

  • BCC

    0.7800

    93.47

    +0.83%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.4

    +1.29%

  • BCE

    0.4200

    22.04

    +1.91%

  • AZN

    0.5400

    67.59

    +0.8%

  • VOD

    0.1350

    9.305

    +1.45%

X's 'Community Notes': a model for Meta?
X's 'Community Notes': a model for Meta? / Photo: EVARISTO SA - AFP/File

X's 'Community Notes': a model for Meta?

Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg said Tuesday that the group's platforms including Facebook and Instagram would in future imitate rival X's "Community Notes" feature rather than using professional fact-checkers.

Text size:

The feature "empower(s) their community to decide when posts are potentially misleading" thanks to "people across a diverse range of perspectives," Zuckerberg wrote in a blog post.

Facebook's fact-checking programme currently operates in 26 languages, partnering with more than 80 media organisations worldwide including AFP.

- What are Community Notes? -

When an X post has had a note appended, it is displayed to users with a small box titled "Readers added context".

Usually short and factual, expanding on or contradicting the original post, most published notes also include a link to relevant source material.

Introduced in January 2021 under the name Birdwatch, Community Notes were boosted by Elon Musk after he took over Twitter in late 2022 and renamed it X, and they now appear to users in 44 countries.

The social network "needs to become by far the most accurate source of information about the world", Musk posted at the time.

- Who writes Community Notes? -

Any willing X user can sign up to Community Notes.

Before writing notes of their own, they must first spend time rating other people's suggested notes, contributing to the process that decides whether they are published.

Even once allowed to write notes, users can lose the right if others consistently rate them unhelpful.

X underscores that voting on notes is not by simple majority.

Instead, the company looks for agreement between raters who have disagreed in the past -- a system it says "helps reduce one-sided ratings and helps to prevent manipulation".

This has not stopped charges from politicians that highly motivated groups carpet-bomb posts they dislike with notes, hoping at least one will get through.

- What impact have Community Notes had? -

There is little conclusive scientific analysis available of Community Notes' effectiveness.

One April 2024 paper published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that a sample of notes on misinformation about Covid-19 vaccines "were accurate, cited moderate and high-credibility sources, and were attached to posts viewed hundreds of millions of times".

But the authors did not study the notes' impact on users.

Meanwhile in a survey of notes posted on November 5 -- US election day -- Cornell University digital harm researcher Alexios Mantzarlis found that just 29 percent of "fact-checkable" tweets for which notes were suggested in fact displayed a note rated as helpful.

"If Community Notes had an impact on election information quality on X, it was marginal at best," Mantzarlis wrote in an article for the Poynter Institute.

- What could come next? -

Some experts AFP spoke to were confident that Community Notes could improve information quality on Meta platforms.

"Community notes as such is a very, very effective tool in content moderation if applied in an equitable way, we can see that on Wikimedia or Wikipedia," said Katja Munoz of the Berlin-based think-tank DGAP.

Nevertheless, "the crowd may say something correct, but there can also be ill-intentioned people who are there to spread disinformation," said Christine Balaguer, a professor at France's Institut Mines-Telecom who studies the phenomenon.

Eliminating fact-checking could set Meta up for a clash with the European Union if it expands the model outside the United States.

The bloc's Digital Services Act encourages platforms to fight misinformation with tools including professional fact-checkers.

Zuckerberg's move "is a major shock" that "announces the clashes that the tech platforms are going to be having with EU regulation in general", Munoz said.

In his statement, Zuckerberg said fact-checking had been "a program intended to inform (that) too often became a tool to censor".

"Fact-checkers weren't censors," said Bill Adair, a professor of journalism and public policy at Duke University and co-founder of the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN).

Those working with Meta "were signatories of a code of principles that requires they be transparent and nonpartisan", he noted.

IFCN chief Angie Drobnic Holan also defended fact-checkers' work, writing on X that Zuckerberg had faced "extreme political pressure from a new administration and its supporters".

Trump said Tuesday that Meta's move had "probably" been in response to his threats against the company and Zuckerberg.

Y.Havel--TPP