Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Google, Facebook Say They'll Soon Roll Out Tools To Sift Fake Canadian News

The Canadian Press, 24 Jan, 2017 12:21 PM
    OTTAWA — Two of the world's biggest digital information platforms say they're getting ready to roll out tools in Canada designed to crack down on so-called "fake news."
     
    The phenomenon of false or misleading information being widely disseminated online became a major storyline in the U.S. presidential campaign, which culminated in the November election of Donald Trump.
     
    It's also been happening in Canada: Conservative leadership candidate Kellie Leitch’s campaign manager, Nick Kouvalis, has admitted posting false information about the Trudeau government in an effort to draw out left-leaning voters.
     
    Early last month, Kouvalis tweeted a list of "billions" of dollars Justin Trudeau's Liberal government had supposedly given to international aid organizations in the last year, including $351 million for the designated terrorist group Hamas.
     
    He later admitted the information was false, telling Maclean's magazine that he posted it "to make the left go nuts."
     
    Both Google and Facebook have been testing online tools in the U.S. and the U.K. aimed at helping users identify credible information posted on their web portals.
     
    And they say they expect to provide similar tools to Canadian users soon.
     
    Google has incorporated a "fact-check" tag into some news pages to help readers find fact-checked content in large stories.
     
    "We're actively working to bring this feature to Canada in the near future," said a source at Google who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about it publicly.
     
    Facebook said it was still in the early stages of testing, tweaking and rolling out tools to combat fake news.
     
    "It is still early days, but we’re looking forward to learning and continuing to roll this out more broadly soon," said Facebook spokesman Alex Kucharski.
     
    Heritage Minister Melanie Joly said she wants to speak with social network and media managers to see what, if anything, the government can do to ensure Canadians are viewing reliable information when they search the Internet.
     
    But it's too early to speculate on policy options, said a spokesman for the minister, noting that ensuring the integrity of news and information on the web is part of the government's wider review of the media landscape.
     
    "We want to engage with digital platforms on the matter," said Joly's press secretary Pierre-Olivier Herbert.
     
    In December, the federal heritage committee began studying ways to curtail false news as part of a broader study looking into the future of media in Canada and the impact of digital technology on journalism.
     
    Over several months, the committee repeatedly heard from witnesses who raised the issue, said committee chair Hedy Fry.
     
    "We saw what happened in the United States," said Fry. "The United States woke everybody up."
     
    During the U.S. presidential election campaign, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton pointed out that false news on the Internet had become a danger to human life.
     
    She was talking about "Pizzagate," a phoney election story that prompted a North Carolina man to open fire inside an assault rifle inside a pizza restaurant in Washington, D.C. No one was injured and the man was charged with assault with a weapon.
     
    Ridding the Internet of misrepresented facts is a complex issue, Fry noted, saying there are no easy ways of ensuring Canadians get verifiable facts without impacting freedom of the press.
     
    The committee is expected to report its findings to the government in the spring.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Walking With Nanak' Conscious Attempt To Humanise The Saint: Author Haroon Khalid

    Walking With Nanak' Conscious Attempt To Humanise The Saint: Author Haroon Khalid
    Its format is rather unique: part fiction, part history and part travelogue. Pakistani author Haroon Khalid says his third book, "Walking With Nanak", is a "conscious attempt to humanise the saint" and could be the first work of its kind in the country.

    Walking With Nanak' Conscious Attempt To Humanise The Saint: Author Haroon Khalid

    WATCH: Mexican Party Invitation Goes Viral, 1.2 Million People RSVP

    WATCH: Mexican Party Invitation Goes Viral, 1.2 Million People RSVP
    A Mexican teen has more than one million people who say they'll attend her 15th birthday party - thanks to her father's invite, which has gone viral on Facebook. 

    WATCH: Mexican Party Invitation Goes Viral, 1.2 Million People RSVP

    US President-Elect Donald Trump Declared TIME Person Of The Year

    US President-Elect Donald Trump Declared TIME Person Of The Year
    Time magazine on Wednesday named President-elect Donald Trump its Person of the Year.

    US President-Elect Donald Trump Declared TIME Person Of The Year

    Elderly Newfoundland Couple Separated After 68 Years Of Marriage, Face First Christmas Apart

    Elderly Newfoundland Couple Separated After 68 Years Of Marriage, Face First Christmas Apart
    Roy and Dorothy Vardy have been separated since June after Dorothy — who turns 91 this month — spent five weeks in hospital.

    Elderly Newfoundland Couple Separated After 68 Years Of Marriage, Face First Christmas Apart

    Stone Age Humans Enjoyed Diverse Plant-based Menu

    Stone Age Humans Enjoyed Diverse Plant-based Menu
    Prehistoric ancestors ate a rich variety of plant-based foods during the Stone Age, say scientists who discovered a collection of 780,000-year-old edible plants in Israel.

    Stone Age Humans Enjoyed Diverse Plant-based Menu

    An Afghan Woman Goes From Refugee To Military Pilot

    An Afghan Woman Goes From Refugee To Military Pilot
    KABUL — From a childhood as a refugee, Capt. Safia Ferozi is now flying a transport plane for Afghanistan's air force as the country's second female pilot, a sign of the efforts to bring more women into the armed forces.

    An Afghan Woman Goes From Refugee To Military Pilot