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Tech Companies Debate How to Handle Fake News

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In a picture taken on May 15, 2012, a logo of social networking facebook is displayed on a laptop screen inside a restaurant in Manila.
 (Photo: Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images)

Facebook has been struggling to respond to charges that fake news found on the network helped Donald Trump win the election. A Pew study found that 44 percent of adults in the United States get their news from Facebook. And, according to a BuzzFeed investigation, in the final three months of the presidential campaign, the top-performing false election news stories on Facebook generated more engagement than the top stories from major news outlets including the New York Times and Washington Post. But Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg claims “more than 99 percent of what people see [on the site] is authentic.” Forum discusses what Facebook and other social media companies should do to curb the spreading of fake news on their sites and whether the companies should intervene at all.

Further Reading:

Guests:

Aarti Shahani, tech reporter, NPR

Alex Kantrowitz, senior technology reporter, BuzzFeed News

Ken Doctor, news industry analyst; contributor to Politico Media, Harvard's Nieman Journalism Lab and Newsonomics.com

Adam Schrader, former trending news curator, Facebook

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