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How curated articles could help Facebook fight fake news

Facebook is ramping up its efforts to serve as a news source for its users by developing a tool that highlights news stories from established sources rather than fake news sites. 

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Eric Risberg/AP/File
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks during the keynote address at the F8 Facebook Developer Conference in San Francisco.

In an attempt to curtail fake news on its network, Facebook could be eyeing a tool that would push stories from established, valid sources onto its users, according to sources close to the project.

As fake news stories have spread across the internet, some have pointed the blame at social media sites like Facebook, where users have nearly unfettered access to share unchecked information with large audiences. Facebook鈥檚 founder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, has previously argued that the site is meant to serve as a tech company rather than a media entity, and has deflected responsibility for the consequences of fake news posts 鈥 much of which favored President-elect Donald Trump over聽his challenger Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election 鈥 onto others.

But now, the company seems to be paving the way for others to follow in a new direction, one that aims to cut back on fake news and provide its users with reliable and valuable content.

Facebook has designed its latest feature, deemed 鈥淐ollections,鈥 to mirror the Snapchat 鈥淒iscover鈥 feature, and featuring their work in a space on the site that users can trust for valid news, sources close to the project told Business Insider.

The site plans to insert the posts into users鈥 News Feeds, which would give reputable publications direct access to the network鈥檚 growing base of users; an option which could be more appealing to publishers than posting from their own pages or buying sponsored posts.

The initiative seems stand in contrast to comments Mr. Zuckerberg鈥檚 made less than a month ago, when he argued that it was unlikely that fake news on the social media platform had played a significant role in electing Donald Trump to the presidency.

鈥淚 do think that there is a certain profound lack of empathy in asserting that the only reason why someone could have voted the way that they did as because they saw some fake news,鈥 Zuckerberg said in the days following the election. 鈥淚 think if you believe that, then I don鈥檛 think you have internalized the message that Trump supporters are trying to send in this election.鈥

But just a week later, he changed his tune and announced new Facebook policies to help identify and crackdown on the spread of fake news, including writing algorithms that can automatically detect false content, placing warning labels on news that may be fake, and 聽allowing users to flag content they find suspicious on their own.

"We are raising the bar for stories that appear in related articles under links in News Feed," Zuckerberg wrote at the time. "A lot of misinformation is driven by financially motivated spam. We're looking into disrupting the economics with ads policies like the one we announced earlier this week, and better ad farm detection."

An attempt to build 鈥淐ollections鈥 seems to follow through on that promise. But while the service will provide verified news to consumers on Facebook, it鈥檚 unclear whether users will access it, much less accept it.

As the 2016 campaign served to divide the nation in unprecedented ways, more people turned inward to seek message-based news that aligned with their own viewpoints, feeding into a media-bubble culture in which their own views are supported and echoed back to them. Because many relied on news that fed into an internal bias, a significant amount of people met the election鈥檚 outcome with shock, wondering how Mr. Trump could have defied the predicted victory of Mrs. Clinton.

鈥淎mericans are ... likely to get what they do know, or think they know, from an echo chamber,鈥 Krista Jenkins, professor of political science at Fairleigh Dickinson University in Teaneck, N.J., previously told 海角大神.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 needed in our discourse is a cross-pollination of ideas and viewpoints so that we begin to turn the tide on the alarming trend of seeing the other side as dangerous and misguided,鈥 she added, 鈥渞ather than those whose experiences and perspectives lead them to believe different things about where to go and how to get there.鈥

While Facebook鈥檚 attempt to curate a source for trusted news could be a step in the right direction, breaking news consumers of the pattern could be a more difficult task. Some publications or shows are trying to engage the other side, including the left-leaning 鈥淒aily Show,鈥 which last week featured conservative commentator Tomi Lahren of TheBlaze, but experts say that might not be enough to make Americans see the value in getting the whole picture. 聽

"These bubbles have not been imposed upon the public 鈥 it was what the people want," Paul Levinson, a professor of communication and media studies at Fordham University in New York, previously told the Monitor. "As long as social media continues to provide a very easy forum for these news bubbles ... it is not going to stop, and some late-night talk shows are not going to be enough to do that."

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