Wikipedia and fact-checking explained

Wikipedia's volunteer editor community has the responsibility of fact-checking Wikipedia's content. Their aim is to curb the dissemination of misinformation and disinformation by the website.

Wikipedia is considered one of the major free open source websites, where millions can read, edit and post their views for free. Therefore Wikipedia takes the effort to provide its readers with well-verified sources. Fact-checking is an aspect of the broader reliability of Wikipedia.

Various academic studies about Wikipedia and the body of criticism of Wikipedia seek to describe the limits of Wikipedia's reliability, document who uses Wikipedia for fact-checking and how, and what consequences result from this use. Wikipedia articles can have poor quality in many ways including self-contradictions.[1] Those poor articles require improvement.

Large platforms including YouTube and Facebook[2] use Wikipedia's content to confirm the accuracy of the information in their own media collections.

Using Wikipedia for fact-checking

Wikipedia serves as a public resource for access to genuine information. For example, the COVID-19 pandemic was an important topic on which people relied on Wikipedia for genuine information.[3] Seeking public trust is a major part of Wikipedia's publication philosophy. Various reader polls and studies have reported public trust in Wikipedia's process for quality control.[4] In general, the public uses Wikipedia to counter fake news.

YouTube fact-checking

At the 2018 South by Southwest conference, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki made the announcement that YouTube was using Wikipedia to fact check videos which YouTube hosts.[5] [6] [7] [8] No one at YouTube had consulted anyone at Wikipedia about this development, and the news at the time was a surprise. The intent at the time was for YouTube to use Wikipedia as a counter to the spread of conspiracy theories. This is done by adding new information boxes under some YouTube videos, thereby, attracting conspiracy theorists.

Facebook fact-checking

Facebook uses Wikipedia in various ways. Following criticism of Facebook in the context of fake news around the 2016 United States presidential election, Facebook recognized that Wikipedia already had an established process for fact-checking. Facebook's subsequent strategy for countering fake news included using content from Wikipedia for fact-checking.[9] In 2020, Facebook began to include information from Wikipedia's info boxes in its own general reference knowledge panels to provide objective information.[10]

Fact-checking Wikipedia

Fact-checking is one aspect of the general editing process in Wikipedia. The volunteer community develops a process for reference and fact-checking through community groups such as WikiProject Reliability. Wikipedia has a reputation for cultivating a culture of fact-checking among its editors.[11] Wikipedia's fact-checking process depends on the activity of its volunteer community of contributors, who numbered 200,000 as of 2018.[12]

The development of fact-checking practices is ongoing in the Wikipedia editing community.[13] One development that took years was the 2017 community decision to declare a particular news source, Daily Mail, as generally unreliable as a citation for verifying claims.[13] [14] Through strict guidelines on verifiability, Wikipedia has been combating misinformation. According to Wikipedia guidelines, all articles on Wikipedia's "mainspace" must be verifiable.

Self-contradiction articles

A self-contradiction article is an article that contradicts itself.

An experiment was conducted on detecting self-contradiction articles on Wikipedia using a developed model called "Pairwise Contradiction Neural Network" (PCNN).[15]

Contributions to this experiment are as follows:

Limitations

When Wikipedia experiences vandalism, platforms that reuse Wikipedia's content may republish that vandalized content.[16] In 2016, journalists described how vandalism in Wikipedia undermines its use as a credible source.[17]

Vandalism is prohibited by Wikipedia. The website suggests these steps for inexperienced beginners to handle vandalism: access, revert, warn, watch, and finally report.

In 2018, Facebook and YouTube were major users of Wikipedia for its fact-checking functions, but those commercial platforms were not contributing to Wikipedia's free nonprofit operations in any way.

Self-contradiction limitations: The two main limitations of the self-contradiction PCNN model are the subjectivity of self-contradiction and not being able to deal with lengthy documents.

See also

Further consideration

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hsu . Cheng . Li . Cheng-Te . Saez-Trumper . Diego . Hsu . Yi-Zhan . 2021 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data) . WikiContradiction: Detecting Self-Contradiction Articles on Wikipedia . https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9671319 . 2021 . 427–436 . 10.1109/BigData52589.2021.9671319. 2111.08543 . 978-1-6654-3902-2 . 244130115 .
  2. Web site: Flynn . Kerry . Facebook outsources its fake news problem to Wikipedia—and an army of human moderators . . en . 5 October 2017.
  3. Web site: Benjakob . Omer . Why Wikipedia is immune to coronavirus . . en . 4 August 2020.
  4. Web site: Cox . Joseph . 11 August 2014 . Why People Trust Wikipedia More Than the News . . en.
  5. Web site: Glaser . April . YouTube Is Adding Fact-Check Links for Videos on Topics That Inspire Conspiracy Theories . . en . 14 August 2018.
  6. Web site: Montgomery . Blake . Mac . Ryan . Warzel . Charlie . YouTube Said It Will Link To Wikipedia Excerpts On Conspiracy Videos — But It Didn't Tell Wikipedia . . en . 13 March 2018.
  7. Web site: Feldman . Brian . Why Wikipedia Works . Intelligencer . . en-us . 16 March 2018.
  8. Web site: Feldman . Brian . Wikipedia Is Not Going to Save YouTube From Misinformation . Intelligencer . . en-us . 14 March 2018.
  9. Web site: Locker . Melissa . Facebook thinks the answer to its fake news problems is Wikipedia . . 5 October 2017.
  10. Web site: Perez . Sarah . Facebook tests Wikipedia-powered information panels, similar to Google, in its search results . . 11 June 2020.
  11. Web site: Keller . Jared . How Wikipedia Is Cultivating an Army of Fact Checkers to Battle Fake News . . en . 14 June 2017.
  12. Web site: Timmons . Heather . Kozlowska . Hanna . 200,000 volunteers have become the fact checkers of the internet . . en . 27 April 2018.
  13. Web site: Iannucci . Rebecca . What can fact-checkers learn from Wikipedia? We asked the boss of its nonprofit owner . . 6 July 2017.
  14. Web site: Rodriguez . Ashley . In a first, Wikipedia has deemed the Daily Mail too "unreliable" to be used as a citation . . en . 10 February 2017.
  15. Book: Hsu . Cheng . Li . Cheng-Te . Saez-Trumper . Diego . Hsu . Yi-Zhan . 2021 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data) . WikiContradiction: Detecting Self-Contradiction Articles on Wikipedia . 2021-12-15 . https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9671319 . Orlando, FL, USA . IEEE . 427–436 . 10.1109/BigData52589.2021.9671319 . 2111.08543 . 978-1-6654-3902-2. 244130115 .
  16. Web site: Funke . Daniel . Wikipedia vandalism could thwart hoax-busting on Google, YouTube and Facebook . Poynter . . 18 June 2018.
  17. News: A.E.S. . Wikipedia celebrates its first 15 years . The Economist . 15 January 2016.