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New Anglican leader says immigration debate dividing UK
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Russia says made 'proposal' to France over jailed researcher
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Bangladesh PM hopeful Rahman returns from exile ahead of polls
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Police suspect suicide bomber behind Nigeria's deadly mosque blast
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AFCON organisers allowing fans in for free to fill empty stands: source
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Mali coach Saintfiet hits out at European clubs, FIFA over AFCON changes
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Pope urges Russia, Ukraine dialogue in Christmas blessing
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Last Christians gather in ruins of Turkey's quake-hit Antakya
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Pope Leo condemns 'open wounds' of war in first Christmas homily
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Mogadishu votes in first local elections in decades under tight security
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Prime minister hopeful Tarique Rahman arrives in Bangladesh
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'Starting anew': Indonesians in disaster-struck Sumatra hold Christmas mass
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Cambodian PM's wife attends funerals of soldiers killed in Thai border clashes
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Prime minister hopeful Tarique Rahman arrives in Bangladesh: party
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Pacific archipelago Palau agrees to take migrants from US
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Pope Leo expected to call for peace during first Christmas blessing
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Australia opts for all-pace attack in fourth Ashes Test
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'We hold onto one another and keep fighting,' says wife of jailed Istanbul mayor
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North Korea's Kim visits nuclear subs as Putin hails 'invincible' bond
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Trump takes Christmas Eve shot at 'radical left scum'
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Leo XIV celebrates first Christmas as pope
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Diallo and Mahrez strike at AFCON as Ivory Coast, Algeria win
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'At your service!' Nasry Asfura becomes Honduran president-elect
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Trump-backed Nasry Asfura declared winner of Honduras presidency
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Diallo strikes to give AFCON holders Ivory Coast winning start
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Dow, S&P 500 end at records amid talk of Santa rally
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Spurs captain Romero facing increased ban after Liverpool red card
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Bolivian miners protest elimination of fuel subsidies
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A lack of respect? African football bows to pressure with AFCON change
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Trump says comedian Colbert should be 'put to sleep'
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Mahrez leads Algeria to AFCON cruise against Sudan
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Southern California braces for devastating Christmas storm
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Amorim wants Man Utd players to cover 'irreplaceable' Fernandes
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First Bond game in a decade hit by two-month delay
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Brazil's imprisoned Bolsonaro hospitalized ahead of surgery
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Serbia court drops case against ex-minister over train station disaster
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Investors watching for Santa rally in thin pre-Christmas trade
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David Sacks: Trump's AI power broker
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Delap and Estevao in line for Chelsea return against Aston Villa
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Why metal prices are soaring to record highs
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Stocks tepid in thin pre-Christmas trade
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UN experts slam US blockade on Venezuela
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Bethlehem celebrates first festive Christmas since Gaza war
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Set-piece weakness costing Liverpool dear, says Slot
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Two police killed in explosion in Moscow
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EU 'strongly condemns' US sanctions against five Europeans
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Arsenal's Kepa Arrizabalaga eager for more League Cup heroics against Che;sea
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Thailand-Cambodia border talks proceed after venue row
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Kosovo, Serbia 'need to normalise' relations: Kosovo PM to AFP
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Newcastle boss Howe takes no comfort from recent Man Utd record
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.
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.
P.Hernandez--AT