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Facebook Privacy The Internet Technology

In a Bid To Curtail Spread of Misinformation, Facebook's WhatsApp Now Tells Users When a Message Has Been Forwarded (hindustantimes.com) 65

In a bid to fight spread of misinformation on its platform, Facebook-owned WhatsApp announced on Tuesday that it is launching a new feature globally that will highlight when a message has been forwarded versus composed by the sender. At the centre of the issue is high-volume sharing of misleading and false information, often arching political and religious sentiments, that is tricking a significant number of WhatsApp users. (WhatsApp is used by more than a billion users worldwide.) From a report: From now on, WhatsApp will put a "forwarded" label on these messages. "This extra context will help make one-on-one and group chats easier to follow. It will also help you determine if your friend or relative wrote the message they sent or if it came from someone else," the company said in a note. "WhatsApp cares deeply about your safety. We encourage you to think before sharing forwarded messages. As a reminder, you can report spam or block a contact in one tap and always reach out to WhatsApp directly for help," it added. To see this new forwarded label, users are required to have the newest supported version of WhatsApp on their phones. Additionally, this week the company relaunched a campaign in India as part of which it is running full-page ads on several newspapers in the country to create awareness about the issue.
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In a Bid To Curtail Spread of Misinformation, Facebook's WhatsApp Now Tells Users When a Message Has Been Forwarded

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is just a step in the direction of making us think that it is the big mega-corporation's job to censor what what we read.

    Stop using anything from Facebook, please. Make them a small corporation again. Let them thrive in China where censorship will help them make money. But get them the heck out of my free United States democracy. They are dangerous.

    • Not really. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:26PM (#56926466)

      This is just a step in the direction of making us think that it is the big mega-corporation's job to censor what what we read.

      Actually, It's one mega-corp trying to stop efforts from people who are deliberately misinforming you on their platform. They have no control of information you get elsewhere.

      Let them thrive in China where censorship will help them make money. But get them the heck out of my free United States democracy. They are dangerous.

      What's more dangerous is people that get their information from the internet without checking the credibility of the source. Facebook is full of these kind of people and they are doing real damage to our democracies.

      Stop using anything from Facebook

      I agree, social media has done far more harm to the world than good.

      • Actually, It's one mega-corp trying to stop efforts from people who are deliberately misinforming you on their platform. They have no control of information you get elsewhere.

        Two platforms so far, owned by the same corp.

        Good thing we don't have a few internet mega corps who own multiple platforms. And all lean in the same direction, politically.

      • Short Facebook shares now!

        If you don't want false information, what are you doing on Facebook? even the stuff your friends post on Facebook is fake!

      • There is one big problem with your argument: The notion of "credibility" might *seem* objective. However, there is a little cottage industry ("fact checking") that *asserts* credibility while pushing misleading or false information (e.g. Snopes).
        Social media is such a new and powerful paradigm shift in human communication that the knee-jerk reaction by well meaning folks to "stop false information" is understandable, but also extremely naive. Of course the algorithm and/or human beings will inevitably consi

        • So, the only *free* thing to do is let information flow, allow people to decide for themselves, and allow things to happen as they happen. The only "destruction" of democracy that I see is that > are losing their ability to shape public opinion because human beings are able to share information more quickly and easily with each other.

          That only thing they are doing is informing people if it's a mass communication, they aren't blocking information. Also, you greatly underestimate the ability to manipulate people. Have you forgotten Cambridge Analytica so quickly?

        • pushing misleading or false information (e.g. Snopes).

          Your use of the word 'pushing' makes it sound as though Snopes has an agenda that it is pursuing. I'd like to see some evidence to back up that assertion.

          I've seen Snopes perform sloppy research. I've seen articles that were improved over time.

          Snopes is no more authorative than Wikipedia, but both have the same thing going for them. They cite sources.

          Snopes tells you what it did to reach the conclusion it has drawn. If those sources are incomplete, that's apparent. If information is from a source you consid

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Overreact much?

      This is Facebook finally, finally, deciding to add a snippet of highly relevant and useful metadata to some posts. Metadata that most every other service, including Twitter, has added routinely from the get-go.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        It's the sales pitch that done it in. "We're doing this to curtail misinformation", has become highly politicised under a different term, that war on "fake news"*. So while personally I don't have a problem at all with adding a tag that says "this was forwarded from $source", at the same time I can easily see why people mistrust the announcement, exactly because of the spin.

        So yeah, nice try but salespitch fail.

        * And before you go pointing fingers at that disliked-by-CNN party well-known to have bandied aro

    • by Falos ( 2905315 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @11:28PM (#56926674)

      I'm all for people abandoning facebook, especially the type in question (ie parrots inside echochambers).

      I'm aware that censorship is a broadly-applicable word. It applies even to private platforms muting "hatespeech". Legal censorship is a thing. You can censor whatever you want, you don't even have to adhere to any concrete standards, you can do fuckall. That tends to contradict the noble posturing usually found nearby, however.

      Anyway I'll happily swing the word around. But it doesn't belong here. This is a fucking FW tag. Nothing removed or prevented.

      FW:FWD:FW:RE:FW:funny read to the end!! isn't censored. Though it probably will be if you post it anywhere intelligent.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yes, you're right. If there's anything anti-censorship activists can agree on, it's that providing people with more information is bad.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Is the "Fw:" suffix added to email a form of censorship? Did it lead to greater censorship?

      • Is the "Fw:" suffix added to email a form of censorship? Did it lead to greater censorship?

        Er, the Fw: prefix would be a form of oppression, if you couldn't $^&^& edit it or remove it.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      This is just a step in the direction of making us think that it is the big mega-corporation's job to censor what what we read.

      How? This is basically the equivalent of mail clients placing FW: in front of a forwarded message...

      If anything I'd rather know if a message I receive is genuinely from the sender or something they've copied.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Just stop using anything including /.. :P

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'll have to ask my grandma what those are like.

  • by grep -v '.*' * ( 780312 ) on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @10:55PM (#56926584)

    highlight when a message has been forwarded versus composed by the sender

    So I suppose it'll also tag a copy/paste sequence directly from another message? That's just as hard (easy) as forwarding. (Actually, it's ever-so-slightly harder, but not really.)

    What if I dictate it verbally? (if nothing else, split screen or 2nd screen.)

    What if I paraphrase it?

    So all they're actually doing is highlighting the FORWARD indicator. Like that's going to stop anyone from forwarding the message to start with? I really don't get this. (I really don't get Facebook / Twitter either, but that's another matter and just me.)

    • So I suppose it'll also tag a copy/paste sequence directly from another message? That's just as hard (easy) as forwarding. (Actually, it's ever-so-slightly harder, but not really.)

      Never worked tech support, have you?

  • I think their reasoning is bullshit, but i found forwarding a message in whatsapp a pain in the neck, as i always needed to send another message to say that i forwarded the previous one from Jack.

    This is whatsapp catching up with an email feature we had 30 years ago.

  • Ah yes, it's all for our safety.

    I wouldn't trust that bit of info there, comrade!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    What they need is a rumor number (the idea was developed by a friend of mine in high school).

    The idea is this:
    If I tell you something that I witnessed that is a rumor number of zero.
    If you then tell someone else, then it is a rumor number of one.
    They can then tell someone with a rumor number of two and so on.

    Each forwarding would increase the rumor number, so if you get a message with a rumor number of 156, you can be pretty sure that it has "been around" and might not be the most reliable message (think th

  • "If you're a true friend, please copy/paste this to your friends, don't forward it."

    I'm seeing this on Facebook once in a while

  • To save me re typing some of my longer messages to particular friends. It's going to look bad on my part now

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