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posted by martyb on Wednesday April 17 2019, @10:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the let-me-think-about-it-a-bit dept.

Fake news has already fanned the flames of distrust towards media, politics and established institutions around the world. And while new technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) might make things even worse, it can also be used to combat misinformation.

A fake story might, for example, make the claim that a very high percentage of crimes in a European country are committed by foreign immigrants. In theory that might be an easy claim to disprove because of large troves of available open data, yet journalists waste valuable time in finding that data. So Fandango’s tool links all kinds of European open data sources together, and bundles and visualises it. Journalists can use, for example, pooled together national data to address claims about crimes or apply data from the European Copernicus satellites to climate change debates.

Essentially, previous studies show that fake news stories are shared online in different ways from real news stories, says Prof. Bronstein. Fake news might have far more shares than likes on Facebook, while regular posts tend to have more likes than they have shares. By spotting patterns like these, GoodNews attaches a credibility score to a news item.

The GoodNews team hopes to monetise this service through a start-up called Fabula AI, based in London. While they hope to roll out the product at the end of the year, they envisage having customers such as large media companies like Facebook and Twitter, but also individual users.

Can artificial intelligence help end fake news?

[More Info]:
Fandango
GoodNews

Do you think that AI is a solution to the fake news problem ??


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by PartTimeZombie on Wednesday April 17 2019, @11:52PM

    by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Wednesday April 17 2019, @11:52PM (#831404)

    Swedes may disagree, as their crime stats show significant increase...

    Your link doesn't really show that:

    The level of exposure to offences against the person has decreased somewhat since 2005...

    Around one in four (26%) surveyed report these crimes, which is a decrease by 6 per cent from the previous year (2014)

    While the number of reported assaults has been on the increase, crime victim surveys show that a large part of the increase may be due to the fact that more crimes are actually reported.

    Etc.

    I couldn't find the bit that links crime to immigrants either. Perhaps you could link that?

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