Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2022-08-16 21:32:35| Engadget

Meta has outlined its strategy for combatting misinformation during the 2022 US midterm elections, and they'll mostly sound familiar if you remember the company's 2020 approach. The Facebook and Instagram owner said it will maintain policies and protections "consistent" with the presidential election, including policies barring vote misinformation and linking people to trustworthy information. It will once again ban political ads during the last week of the election campaign. This isn't quite a carbon copy, however, as Meta is fine-tuning its methods in response to lessons learned two years ago.To start, Meta is "elevating" post comments from local elections officials to make sure reliable polling information surfaces in conversations. The company is also acknowledging concerns that it used info labels too often in 2020 for the 2022 midterms, it's planning to show labels in a "targeted and strategic way."Meta's update comes just days after Twitter detailed its midterm strategy, and echoes the philosophy of its social media rival. Both are betting that their 2020 measures were largely adequate, and that it's just a question of refining those systems for 2022.Whether or not that's true is another matter. In a March 2021 study, advocacy group Avaaz said Meta didn't do enough to stem the flow of misinformation and allowed billions of views for known false content. Whistleblower Frances Haugen also maintains that Meta has generally struggled to fight bogus claims, and it's no secret that Meta had to extend its ban on political ads after the 2020 vote. Facebook didn't catch some false Brazilian election ads, according to Global Witness. Meta won't necessarily deal with serious problems during the midterms, but it's not guaranteed a smooth ride.


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

26.04The FTC accuses Amazon of using Signals auto-deleting messages to erase evidence
26.04Drake deletes AI-generated Tupac track after Shakurs estate threatened to sue
26.04Aaron Sorkin is working on a Jan. 6-focused follow-up to The Social Network
26.04Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra falls to a new low, plus the rest of the week's best tech deals
26.04Nikons Z8 is a phenomenal mirrorless camera for the price
26.04Some of our favorite Bose headphones and earbuds are back to all-time low prices
26.04Apple's 13-inch MacBook Air with the M3 chip has never been cheaper
26.04NHTSA concludes Tesla Autopilot investigation after linking the system to 14 deaths
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

26.04Dead whistleblower accused Boeing of safety breaches
26.04The FTC accuses Amazon of using Signals auto-deleting messages to erase evidence
26.04Drake deletes AI-generated Tupac track after Shakurs estate threatened to sue
26.04What Makes This Trade Great? A Day in the Market with Barrie Einarson
26.04Aaron Sorkin is working on a Jan. 6-focused follow-up to The Social Network
26.04Tomorrow's Earnings/Economic Releases of Note; Market Movers
26.04Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra falls to a new low, plus the rest of the week's best tech deals
26.04Nikons Z8 is a phenomenal mirrorless camera for the price
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .