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Facebook counters misinformation with expanded language coverage

Mark Zuckerberg at Cc Hub, Yaba, during his last visit to Nigeria in 2017

Facebook, in partnership with Africa Check, today announced it has added new local language support for several African languages as part of its “Third-Party Fact-Checking programme,” which helps to assess the accuracy of news on Facebook and also aims to reduce the spread of misinformation.

Through the programme, which was launched in 2018 across five countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, including South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal and Cameroon, Facebook has partnered with Africa Check, Africa’s first independent fact-checking organisation, to expand its local language coverage.
In Nigeria, the languages covered under the programme now are Yoruba and Igbo, in addition to Hausa, which was already supported.
Other languages covered across Africa are Swahili in Kenya, Wolof in Senegal, as well as Afrikaans, Zulu, Setswana, Sotho, Northern Sotho and Southern Ndebele in South Africa.

Kojo Boakye, Facebook head of public policy, Africa, said “we continue to make significant investments in our efforts to fight the spread of false news on our platform, whilst building supportive, safe, informed and inclusive communities. Our third-party fact-checking programme is just one of many ways we are doing this, and with the expansion of local language coverage, this will help in further improving the quality of information people see on Facebook. We know there is still more to do, and we’re committed to this.”

According to Noko Makgato, executive director of Africa Check, “we’re thrilled to be expanding the arsenal of the languages we cover in our work on Facebook’s third-party fact-checking programme. In countries as linguistically diverse as Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya and Senegal, fact-checking in local languages is vital. Not only does it let us fact-check more content on Facebook, it also means we’ll be reaching more people across Africa with verified, credible information.”

Facebook’s fact-checking programme relies on feedback from the Facebook community as one of many signals Facebook uses to raise potentially false stories to fact-checkers for review.

Through the programme, local articles will be fact-checked alongside the verification of photos and videos, and if any of Facebook’s fact-checking partners identifies a story as false, Facebook will show it lower in News Feed, significantly reducing its distribution.

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