WhatsApp selects 20 teams to curb fake news globally, including India
Facebook-owned WhatsApp on November
13, 2018 announced that it has selected 20 research teams worldwide – including
experts from India and those of Indian origin — who will work towards how
misinformation spreads and what additional steps the mobile messaging platform
could take to curb fake news.
Shakuntala Banaji from
London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), Anushi Agrawal and
Nihal Passanha from Bengaluru-based media and arts collective “Maraa” and
Ramnath Bhat from LSE have been selected for the paper titled “WhatsApp
Vigilantes? WhatsApp messages and mob violence in India”.
The research examines the
ways in which WhatsApp users understand and find solutions to the spate of
“WhatsApp lynchings” that has killed over 30 people so far.
The Indian government has
also directed WhatsApp to take necessary remedial measures to prevent
proliferation of fake and, at times, motivated/sensational messages on its
platform.
Among others selected were
Vineet Kumar from Ranchi-headquartered Cyber Peace Foundation (principal
investigator), Amrita Choudhary, President of the Delhi-based non-profit Cyber
Cafe Association of India (CCAOI) and Anand Raje from Cyber Peace Foundation.
They will work as a team on
the paper titled “Digital literacy and impact of misinformation on emerging
digital societies”.
P.N. Vasanti from Centre for
Media Studies in New Delhi will work with Shyam Sundar, The Pennsylvania State
University (Principal Investigator) to examine the role of content modality in
vulnerability to misinformation, under the topic titled “Seeing is Believing:
Is Video Modality More Powerful in Spreading Fake News?”
WhatsApp had issued a call
for papers in July last year and received proposals from over 600 research
teams around the world.
“Each of the 20 research
teams will receive up to $50,000 for their project (for a total of $1
million),” WhatsApp said in a statement.
Lipika Kamra from O.P.
Jindal Global University and Philippa Williams from the Queen Mary University
of London (Principal Investigator) will examine the role of WhatsApp in
everyday political conversations in India, in the context of India’s social
media ecosystem.
According to Mrinalini Rao,
lead researcher at WhatsApp, the platform cares deeply about the safety of its
over 1.5 billion monthly active users globally and over 200 million users in
India.
“We appreciate the
opportunity to learn from these international experts about how we can continue
to help address the impact of misinformation,” Rao said.
“These studies will help us
build upon recent changes we have made within WhatsApp and support broad
education campaigns to help keep people safe,” she added.
The recipients are from
countries including Brazil, India, Indonesia, Israel, Mexico, Netherlands,
Nigeria, Singapore, Spain, the UK and US.
WhatsApp said it is hosting
them in California so they can hear from product leaders about how it builds
its product.
“Given the nature of private
messaging – where 90 per cent of the messages sent are between two people and
group sizes are strictly limited – our focus remains on educating and
empowering users and proactively tackling abuse,” said the company.
WhatsApp recently
implemented a “forward label” to inform users when they received a message that
was not originally written by their friend or loved one. To tackle abuse,
WhatApp has also set a limit on how many forwards can be sent that is five.
In India, WhatsApp has
partnered with the Digital Empowerment Foundation to train community leaders in
several states on how to address misinformation.
“We are also running ads in
several languages — in print, online, and on over 100 radio stations —
amounting to the largest public education campaign on misinformation anywhere
in the world,” the company noted.
Sayan Banerjee from
University of Essex, Srinjoy Bose from University of New South Wales and Robert
A. Johns from University of Essex will study “Misinformation in Diverse
Societies, Political Behavior & Good Governance”.
Santosh Vijaykumar from
Northumbria University, Arun Nair from Health Systems Research India Initiative
and Venkat Chilukuri, Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology are part
of the team that will study “Misinformation Vulnerabilities among Elderly
during Disease Outbreaks”.
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