A global fact-checking body has defended one of Australia’s major fact-checkers, RMIT FactLab, after it was suspended from Meta’s program, saying the group is in “good standing” and that it expects to renew its membership imminently.
The decision by Meta, which owns social media platforms Facebook, Instagram and Threads, comes after pressure by the Voice to Parliament’s No campaign and News Corp publications which accused RMIT FactLab of bias after becoming the subject of a debunking.
Meta’s third-party fact-checking program is its main weapon against misinformation on its platforms. Once accredited by the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN), fact-checker organisations can apply to be part of Meta’s program. Approved fact-checking organisations are paid by Meta to verify and debunk viral posts on their platforms (although Meta does not have any editorial oversight into the fact-checks themselves).
When a post is determined to be false, altered or partly false, Meta labels posts on its platforms that contain the claim, reduces the reach and, in some cases, restricts or bans users for spreading misinformation.
Until recently, Australia had three fact-checking organisations: AAP FactCheck, Agence France-Presse and RMIT FactLab. RMIT FactLab had recently attracted the ire of the No campaign and News Corp publications in the lead-up to the Voice to Parliament referendum. A June Sky News Australia article claimed RMIT FactLab’s 17 anti-Voice post fact-checks showed that the organisation had been “hijacked by activists” and noted that its IFCN accreditation had lapsed. IFCN confirmed that Sky News Australia had made a complaint against RMIT FactLab.
Earlier this month, a Sky News Australia video of a Peta Credlin editorial in which she asserted that the Uluru Statement was 26 pages was fact-checked as false. Coalition Senator James Paterson accused Meta’s fact-check of “interfer[ing] with a legitimate public discourse” in a letter sent last week.
Yesterday Meta announced it was suspending RMIT FactLab from its program citing the lapsed IFCN certification, complaints of “possible bias or unfairness” regarding the Voice to Parliament coverage as well as the closeness to the referendum.
“Once the IFCN has considered whether RMIT FactLab’s expired certification should be reinstated, we will again review their participation in our fact checking program,” Meta’s Australian director of policy Mia Garlick wrote back to Paterson.
In addition to RMIT FactLab, at least 20 of Meta’s 100-odd listed fact-checking partners are expired IFCN signatories but remain in their positions. Meta has been contacted for comment.
IFCN director Angie Drobnic Holan responded to Meta’s decision and “attacks on RMIT FactLab” by reaffirming support for the Australian fact-checker.
“RMIT FactLab has a record of successful compliance with the code; we anticipate a successful renewal of its signatory status upon completion of its next independent assessment,” she told Crikey in an email.
Holan said RMIT FactLab had filed for renewal and that the IFCN considered it “a signatory in good status” while the renewal is pending. She also said processing times for renewal had been dragged out due to a “rapid growth in fact-checking organisations” and that Sky News Australia’s complaint, which has been reviewed by IFCN staff, would be considered as part of the application.
“The IFCN will review RMIT FactLab’s renewal application with the same scrutiny it gives to all renewal applications. We aim to complete the process as soon as possible,” she said.
The Sky News / Coalition goons are at war with reality (and its notorious left-wing bias, as noted by Stephen Colbert) and have been for years, so is inevitable they also go to war against fact-checking organisations.
right wing?
The left-wing bias of reality! Love it!
Another example of why there will only be one winner in the war on free speech – those with the money and power to use every tool available.
There is a whole conga line of Big Tech proprietors affiliated with US right wing ‘libertarian’ movement, to promote anti-centrist issues and agitprop, to run protection for corrupt nativist authoritarians and the GOP…..
One would be interested in further interrogation of Meta’s reactionary decision?
And the ‘intellectual dark web’ of writers, influencers, artists etc., often from the centre, but to muddy the water and confuse the centre…..for the messaging of right, without acknowledging.
Sky News’s complaint to Meta about RMIT Factlab clearly confirms that the thing frothing right wing nutcases most fear is verifiable fact. Laughably, they characterise fact as ‘bias’. Not news, but the right is increasingly ethically and logically bereft.
sad that good people are wasted by myopia and gate keepers of cartels
Having to give due regard to these things called “facts” would destroy Newscorp’s business model…
Sooner the better. Its model is destroying our democracies.
Of course Newscorp and the “No” campaign would have far less trouble with fact checkers if they stopped making stuff up…
And stopped lying too.
‘Facts’ are what money says they are.