Meta's Fact-Checking Partners Blindsided by Community Notes Shift

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Meta's Fact-Checking Partners Blindsided by Community Notes Shift
MetaFact-CheckingCommunity Notes
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Meta's sudden switch to a Community Notes model for fact-checking on its platforms has left partner organizations scrambling to understand the impact on their funding and operations.

Meta ’s fact-checking partners claim they were “blindsided” by the company’s decision to abandon third-party fact-checking on Facebook, Instagram, and Threads in favor of a Community Notes model, and some say they are now scrambling to figure out if they can survive the hole this leaves in their funding. \“We heard the news just like everyone else,” says Alan Duke, cofounder and editor in chief of fact-checking site Lead Stories, which started working with Meta in 2019. “No advance notice.

” The news that Meta was no longer planning on using their services was announced in a blog post by chief global affairs officer Joel Kaplan on Tuesday morning and an accompanying video from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Instead, the company plans to rely on X-style Community Notes, which allow users to flag content that they think is inaccurate or requires further explanation. Meta partners with dozens of fact-checking organizations and newsrooms across the globe, 10 of which are based in the US, where Meta’s new rules will first be applied. \“We were blindsided by this,” Jesse Stiller, the managing editor of Meta fact-checking partner Check Your Fact, tells WIRED. His organization started working with Meta in 2019, and they have 10 people working in the newsroom.“This was totally unexpected and out of left field for us. We weren't aware this decision was being considered until Mark dropped the video overnight.” The news organizations who had partnered with Meta to tackle the spread of disinformation on the platform from 2016 are scrambling to figure out how this change will impact them. \“We have no idea what the future looks like for the website going forward,” Stiller says. Duke says Lead Stories had a diverse revenue stream and most of its operations were outside of the US, but claims the decision would still have an impact on the

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