黑料社

Voter education group airs appeal to socmed giants

Aware of how social media can make or break political candidacies, a coalition of legal, academic and civil society organizations has called on social media giants Google, YouTube and Tiktok to implement and enforce policies to rein in disinformation on their platforms and to crack down on websites and blogs that dispense fake news.

On Tuesday, the Movement Against Disinformation (MAD) convened by human rights lawyer Antonio La Vi帽a sent an open letter to the three platforms outlining concrete calls to action to head off risks of voter interference in the May 2022 elections.

More moderators, checkers

鈥淔ew companies share your reach, sway and power over information,鈥 the coalition said in its letter. 鈥淔ewer still are those who can match your resources, technology, and therefore, the moral and civic responsibility to ensure that an electorate is not only free from taint of falsehood but also that disinformation does not degrade both fair debate and cherished democratic principles.鈥

The coalition called on Google to improve the enforcement of policies against disinformation by engaging more content moderators and fact-checkers to counteract purveyors of fake news.

It also asked that the platform ban websites that spread disinformation, and that YouTube creators spreading electoral disinformation not be allowed to monetize their channels and be 鈥渞emoved if not pushed down鈥 in search engine algorithms.

For TikTok, the most downloaded entertainment app in the Philippines in 2020 and now holding the strongest sway among the youth, MAD asked that it replicate the measures against disinformation that it initially implemented in the 2020 US elections.

The measures include, among others, providing an in-app guide for Philippine elections and flagging content and accounts spreading election-related disinformation.

Transparent guidelines

MAD also asked that TikTok conduct and publish a human rights audit, and make transparent its guidelines to flag content as electoral disinformation. 鈥淭ikTok bears a responsibility to help young Filipinos, many of whom may be first-time voters, make informed choices in the voting precincts,鈥 the coalition said. 鈥淭he platform鈥檚 stewardship is made even more pressing because youth voters comprise 31.4 million, or 52 percent of the country鈥檚 total voters.鈥

MAD urged Google and TikTok to commit more resources for fact-checkers and partner with civil society organizations and the academic sector in improving the platforms鈥 fact-checking and voter-education initiatives.

On the rise

Cases of electoral disinformation have been 鈥渙n the rise鈥 amid the election season, the coalition said.

Independent fact-checkers said they had been responding to 30 to 50 requests daily to take down disinformation and fake news on Facebook, much of which 鈥渞eally have malicious intent to mislead [Filipinos],鈥 said John Albert Pagunsan of Fact-checkers Philippines.

La Vi帽a pointed out that disinformation on social media could greatly reinforce on-ground campaigns that could make or break elections

鈥淰irtual content could cause real-world harm, as what happened in the 鈥 elections in 2016 and 2019. We urge you to see the changes through so that together we can help encode the 2022 elections with truth and transparency,鈥 the coalition said.

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