BBC Gossip
  • Home
  • Health
  • News
  • Crime
  • Local News
  • People
  • Guest Post
BBC Gossip
BBC Gossip
  • Home
  • News
  • Health
  • People
  • Celebrities
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Guest Post
Home The impact of Meta discontinuing fact-checking on media and the pursuit of truth
  • Local News

The impact of Meta discontinuing fact-checking on media and the pursuit of truth

    No more fact-checking for Meta. How will this change media — and the pursuit of truth?
    Up next
    Queensland Police told Daily Mail Australia several men were thrown out of the Jai Opetaia fight night at the Gold Coast Convention Centre after engaging in a shocking brawl (pictured)
    Watch as a intense fight erupts among spectators during Australian world champion Jai Opetaia’s boxing match.
    Published on 09 January 2025
    Author
    BBC Gossip

    “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts,” the late New York Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan memorably wrote four decades ago.

    Meta’s recent decision to discontinue its fact-checking program on Facebook, Instagram, and Threads is raising concerns about the impact on an industry dedicated to transparency and truth-seeking. This move comes at a time that feels simpler in retrospect, given the rise of misinformation on social media platforms.

    Mark Zuckerberg’s announcement to end the fact-checking program has been interpreted as a response to the era of “alternative facts” popularized during Donald Trump’s presidency. The move towards a “community notes” system, where users are relied upon to correct misinformation, is reminiscent of a bygone era when journalism operated on a “he said-she said” basis.

    This shift highlights a movement towards a belief that it should be the responsibility of opposing parties, rather than journalists, to call out falsehoods. It also underscores the idea that in the world of information and narratives, the most persuasive and captivating stories often prevail.

    The moment is a crossroads for the fact-checking industry, which will see its influence sharply curtailed when Trump takes office for his second term.

    “In the short term, this is bad news for people who want to go on social media to find trustworthy and accurate information,” said Angie Drobnic Holan, director of the International Fact-Checking Network. Her organization started in 2015 with about 50 members and now has 170, some of whom face staff cuts and potential closure because of Meta’s move.

    “In the long term,” she said, “I think it’s very uncertain what this will all mean.”

    Fact-checking in the media is a few decades old

    Fact-checking is an odd industry, particularly when you consider that it’s a function of all journalism. The concept bubbled up about three decades ago in part to counter “he said-she said” stories and monitor claims in political ads. The organization FactCheck.org, whose primary aim was to help reporters, started in 2003 and the more public-facing PolitiFact four years later.

    PolitiFact, started by then-Tampa Bay Times Washington bureau chief Bill Adair in 2007, won a Pulitzer Prize for its 2008 campaign coverage. It called out politicians for bending or breaking the truth in ways often difficult for reporters who were protective of the sources whose voices populated their stories.

    By 2012, fact-checkers were under attack, primarily by Republicans convinced many were biased and researched voting records to try and prove the point, said Adair, now a Duke University professor. Trump, he said, “sped up a trend that had already begun.”

    Some conservative suspicion of fact-checkers has been warranted because of mistakes that have been made, although there were some Republicans who uttered falsehoods and just didn’t like being called out for it, said Steve Hayes, CEO and editor of the center-right site The Dispatch.

    “The people who practice fact-checking are in some ways saying, ’We are the arbiter of truth, period,” Hayes said. “And anytime you do this, it invites scrutiny on the work that you do.”

    Labeling systems largely didn’t help, either. Giving a misstatement the label of “pants on fire,” as some fact-checkers have, may be a catchy way of attracting attention but also fostered resentment.

    Holan resists the view that fact-checkers have been biased in their work: “That attack line comes from those who feel they should be able to exaggerate and lie without rebuttal or contradiction.”

    People think truth remains elusive even with fact-checking

    GOP suspicion still quickly took root. Journalism’s Poynter Institute, in a survey taken in 2019, found that 70% of Republicans thought the work of fact-checkers was one-sided. Roughly the same percentage of Democrats thought they were fair. Poynter hasn’t asked the same question since. Yet last year, Poynter found that 52% of Americans say they generally find it difficult to determine whether what they’re reading about elections is true or not.

    In a column Wednesday on the conservative watchdog site NewsBusters.org, Tim Graham wrote that during the first nine months of 2024, PolitiFact criticized Republican officials for delivering “mostly false” facts 88 times compared to 31 times for Democrats. To Graham, this proves that the idea the site is independent or nonpartisan is laughable.

    But is that bias? Or is it checking facts?

    Adair used to be reluctant to say what is now the title of his new book: “Beyond the Big Lie: The Epidemic of Political Lying, Why Republicans Do it More, and How it Could Burn Down Our Democracy.” He’s not hesitant anymore.

    “Trump is unmatched as a liar in American politics,” Adair said. “I’m not the first to say that. I think he has capitalized on the fact that there has been this pushback on fact-checkers, and showed other politicians that you can get away with lying, so go ahead and do that.”

    Tension about fact-checking played out during the recent presidential campaign, when Trump’s team was furious with ABC News for calling attention to false statements by the former president during his only debate with Democrat Kamala Harris.

    Trump’s second victory has changed the equation at Meta. Already, X has curtailed its independent fact-checking under owner Elon Musk, a Trump ally. The moves are significant because it removes fact-checking from venues where many users might not otherwise be exposed to it.

    On its own, fact-checking “doesn’t reach those exposed to misinformation,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson of the University of Pennsylvania, who started FactCheck.org. “It tends to reach audiences that were already knowledgeable and wary.”

    On social media, fact-checking also became part of the algorithms that drove information to people, or away from them. Material labeled as false would often be downgraded so it received less exposure. To Republicans who have criticized Big Tech, that amounted to censorship. Yet to Jamieson, successful fact-checking is not censorship — “it’s the process of arguing.”

    Jamieson expressed some optimism that other smart social media users will step up to prevent the dangerous spread of falsehoods. But for fact-checking as it is today to continue to thrive and, even, exist as a journalistic endeavor, Adair said it will likely take influential Republican figures to publicly stand up for the importance of truth.

    NewsBuster columnist Graham, in an interview, had a more pointed piece of advice. “My remedy in all arguments about media trust,” he said, “is that humility is required.”

    ___

    David Bauder writes about media for the AP. Follow him at and https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    You May Also Like
    Several brush fires reported in Ocala National Forest, officials say
    • Local News

    Authorities report multiple brush fires in Ocala National Forest

    In Marion County, Florida, three brush fires were detected in the Ocala…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 24, 2025
    Cities tied to George Floyd mark the 5th anniversary of his death
    • Local News

    Urban Centers Commemorate the 5th Anniversary of George Floyd’s Death

    Activists are reflecting on the past as they navigate a difficult time,…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Police investigate for possible arson after power outage in southeast France
    • Local News

    Authorities looking into potential arson following power loss in southern France

    The outage disrupted traffic and briefly halted events at the Cannes Film…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Cleveland Guardians call up Nic Enright, who has been pitching through cancer battle
    • Local News

    Nic Enright called up by Cleveland Guardians despite battling cancer

    Enright, diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in 2022, has a 2.00 ERA in…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    21-year-old faces DUI charges for Marion County crash that killed Ocala woman
    • Local News

    Young driver charged with DUI after causing a fatal crash in Marion County that took the life of a woman from Ocala

    Authorities in Marion County, Florida, have arrested a 21-year-old man on DUI…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Can Pope Leo remain a U.S. citizen now that he's a foreign head of state?
    • Local News

    “Is Pope Leo Allowed to Keep his U.S. Citizenship as a Foreign Head of State?”

    Pope Leo XIV made history by becoming the first U.S.-born leader of…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Work requirements could transform Medicaid and food aid under US budget bill
    • Local News

    Changes in work rules may affect Medicaid and food assistance in US budget proposal

    If passed as written, people would need jobs to qualify for Medicaid…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    The US has world-class scientific talent. The rest of the world is hoping to lure that away
    • Local News

    “Top Global Scientific Experts in the US Being Sought After by International Competitors”

    As the Trump administration cut billions of dollars in federal funding to…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Lakewood police responding to shoplifting call shoot, injure man
    • Local News

    Man Injured by Lakewood Police During Response to Shoplifting Incident

    LAKEWOOD, Colo – A man was shot by a Lakewood police agent…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Trump's speech to West Point graduates mixes praise, politics and grievances
    • Local News

    Donald Trump’s address to West Point graduates includes compliments, political references, and complaints.

    During the commencement ceremony at Michie Stadium, President Donald Trump addressed the…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 24, 2025
    This massive Florida shark was nicknamed ‘Old Hitler.’ Here’s the weird reason why
    • Local News

    An enormous shark in Florida was called ‘Old Hitler’ for a strange reason

    For decades, Florida residents have reported sightings of a legendary hammerhead shark…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    OSHP investigating plane crash in Sandusky County
    • Local News

    Investigation underway for plane crash in Sandusky County by OSHP

    Troopers say the pilot was attempting to take off from Gibbs Aviation…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025

    Recent Posts

    • Commemorative Protest in Downtown Chicago Marks 5 Years Since George Floyd’s Death
    • Funeral for Virginia Giuffre, who accused Prince Andrew, held secretly in Australia as authorities provide an update on her sad passing.
    • Susan Brownmiller, the writer of the influential book about sexual assault, ‘Against Our Will,’ passes away at the age of 90
    • Alex Palou of Spain Claims Victory in First Oval Track Race at Indianapolis 500
    • Could “Mission Impossible” Be Making a Secret Comeback with ‘The Last Stand’?
    George Floyd day of action protest in Federal Plaza, downtown Chicago commemorates 5 years since of police brutality murder
    • US

    Commemorative Protest in Downtown Chicago Marks 5 Years Since George Floyd’s Death

    A rally held in Chicago was part of a national effort by…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Prince Andrew accuser Virginia Giuffre’s funeral held in secret in Australia as cops release update on her tragic death
    • News

    Funeral for Virginia Giuffre, who accused Prince Andrew, held secretly in Australia as authorities provide an update on her sad passing.

    VIRGINIA Giuffre’s family has held a secret funeral to bid a final farewell…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Susan Brownmiller, author of the landmark book on sexual assault, ‘Against Our Will,’ dies at 90
    • Local News

    Susan Brownmiller, the writer of the influential book about sexual assault, ‘Against Our Will,’ passes away at the age of 90

    NEW YORK – Susan Brownmiller, a well-known feminist and author from the…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    Spain's Alex Palou wins Indianapolis 500 in his first race on an oval track
    • US

    Alex Palou of Spain Claims Victory in First Oval Track Race at Indianapolis 500

    Alex Palou is the first Spaniard to win the biggest event in…
    • BBC Gossip
    • May 25, 2025
    BBC Gossip
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • News
    • Local News
    • Health
    • Crime
    • Guest Post