-
French ice dancers poised for Winter Olympics gold amid turmoil
-
Norway's Ruud wins error-strewn Olympic freeski slopestyle
-
More Olympic pain for Shiffrin as Austria win team combined
-
Itoje returns to captain England for Scotland Six Nations clash
-
Sahara celebrates desert cultures at Chad festival
-
US retail sales flat in December as consumers pull back
-
Bumper potato harvests spell crisis for European farmers
-
Bangladesh's PM hopeful Rahman warns of 'huge' challenges ahead
-
Guardiola seeks solution to Man City's second half struggles
-
Shock on Senegalese campus after student dies during police clashes
-
US vice president Vance on peace bid in Azerbaijan after Armenia visit
-
'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike
-
Shiffrin misses out on Olympic combined medal as Austria win
-
India look forward to Pakistan 'challenge' after T20 World Cup U-turn
-
EU lawmakers back plans for digital euro
-
Starmer says UK govt 'united', presses on amid Epstein fallout
-
Olympic chiefs offer repairs after medals break
-
Moscow chokes Telegram as it pushes state-backed rival app
-
ArcelorMittal confirms long-stalled French steel plant revamp
-
New Zealand set new T20 World Cup record partnership to crush UAE
-
Norway's Ruud wins Olympic freeski slopestyle gold after error-strewn event
-
USA's Johnson gets new gold medal after Olympic downhill award broke
-
Von Allmen aims for third gold in Olympic super-G
-
Liverpool need 'perfection' to reach Champions League, admits Slot
-
Spotify says active users up 11 percent in fourth quarter to 751 mn
-
IOC allows Ukrainian athlete to wear black armband at Olympics for war dead
-
AstraZeneca profit jumps as cancer drug sales grow
-
Waseem's 66 enables UAE to post 173-6 against New Zealand
-
Stocks mostly rise tracking tech, earnings
-
Say cheese! 'Wallace & Gromit' expo puts kids into motion
-
BP profits slide awaiting new CEO
-
USA's Johnson sets up Shiffrin for tilt at Olympic combined gold
-
Trump tariffs hurt French wine and spirits exports
-
Bangladesh police deploy to guard 'risky' polling centres
-
OpenAI starts testing ads in ChatGPT
-
Three-year heatwave bleached half the planet's coral reefs: study
-
England's Buttler calls McCullum 'as sharp a coach as I ever worked with'
-
Israel PM to meet Trump with Iran missiles high on agenda
-
Macron says wants 'European approach' in dialogue with Putin
-
Georgia waiting 'patiently' for US reset after Vance snub
-
US singer leaves talent agency after CEO named in Epstein files
-
Skipper Marsh tells Australia to 'get the job done' at T20 World Cup
-
South Korea avert boycott of Women's Asian Cup weeks before kickoff
-
Barcelona's unfinished basilica hits new heights despite delays
-
Back to black: Philips posts first annual profit since 2021
-
South Korea police raid spy agency over drone flight into North
-
'Good sense' hailed as blockbuster Pakistan-India match to go ahead
-
Man arrested in Thailand for smuggling rhino horn inside meat
-
Man City eye Premier League title twist as pressure mounts on Frank and Howe
-
South Korea police raid spy agency over drone flights into North
TikTok launches crowd-sourced debunking tool in US
TikTok on Wednesday rolled out a crowd-sourced debunking system in the United States, becoming the latest tech platform to adopt a community-driven approach to combating online misinformation.
Footnotes, a feature that the popular video-sharing app began testing in April, allows vetted users to suggest written context for content that might be wrong or misleading -- similar to Community Notes on Meta and X.
"Footnotes draws on the collective knowledge of the TikTok community by allowing people to add relevant information to content," Adam Presser, the platform's head of operations and trust and safety, said in a blog post.
"Starting today, US users in the Footnotes pilot program can start to write and rate footnotes on short videos, and our US community will begin to see the ones rated as helpful -- and rate them, too," he added.
TikTok said nearly 80,000 US-based users, who have maintained an account for at least six months, have qualified as Footnotes contributors. The video-sharing app has some 170 million US users.
TikTok said the feature will augment the platform's existing integrity measures such as labeling content that cannot be verified and partnering with fact-checking organizations, such as AFP, to assess the accuracy of posts on the platform.
The crowd-sourced verification system was popularized by Elon Musk's platform X, but researchers have repeatedly questioned its effectiveness in combating falsehoods.
Earlier this month, a study found more than 90 percent of X's Community Notes are never published, highlighting major limits in efficacy.
The Digital Democracy Institute of the Americas (DDIA) study analyzed the entire public dataset of 1.76 million notes published by X between January 2021 and March 2025.
TikTok cautioned it may take some time for a footnote to become public, as contributors get started and become more familiar with the feature.
"The more footnotes get written and rated on different topics, the smarter and more effective the system becomes," Presser said.
Tech platforms increasingly view the community-driven model as an alternative to professional fact-checking.
Earlier this year, Meta ended its third-party fact-checking program in the United States, with chief executive Mark Zuckerberg saying it had led to "too much censorship."
The decision was widely seen as an attempt to appease President Donald Trump, whose conservative base has long complained that fact-checking on tech platforms serves to curtail free speech and censor right-wing content.
Professional fact-checkers vehemently reject the claim.
As an alternative, Zuckerberg said Meta's platforms, Facebook and Instagram, would use "Community Notes."
Studies have shown Community Notes can work to dispel some falsehoods, like vaccine misinformation, but researchers have long cautioned that it works best for topics where there is broad consensus.
Some researchers have also cautioned that Community Notes users can be motivated to target political opponents by partisan beliefs.
E.Hall--AT