Claire Wardle: How you can help transform the internet into a place of trust
Claire Wardle is an expert on user-generated content and verification working to help improve the quality of information online. Full bio
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at least one relative
or conspiracy videos.
already muted them on Facebook
running through the center.
injected with blood
above it simply says,
this one for years,
that just won't die.
at an example like this, to say,
deepest fears about their own safety
as I have looking at misinformation,
one example of many
fears and vulnerabilities.
we see scores of new memes on Instagram
not to vaccinate their children.
explaining that climate change is a hoax.
endless posts designed to demonize others
religion or sexuality.
challenges of our time.
with freedom of expression at the core,
that's being disseminated
to our democracies, our communities
upon which we all depend -- information --
downright dangerous.
growth of social sharing platforms
signals of trustworthiness.
is horribly muddled.
with the phrase "fake news,"
it's extraordinarily unhelpful
that are actually very different:
conspiracies, propaganda.
we could stop using a phrase
right around the world,
a free and independent press.
news media now more than ever.
doesn't even masquerade as news.
it's misleading.
the weaponization of context.
which has a kernel of truth to it.
from London, from March 2017,
on Westminster Bridge.
was interviewed afterwards,
she was utterly traumatized.
at the victim out of respect.
with this Islamophobic framing,
including: #BanIslam.
what would you do?
or would you leave it up?
is to take this down.
is a human right,
that makes us feel uncomfortable,
difficult to draw.
decision by one person
this account, Texas Lone Star,
disinformation campaign,
of a coordinated campaign
will solve all of our problems,
that we're a long way away
of posts like this.
three interlocking issues
we can consider these challenges.
a rational relationship to information,
will make everything OK,
what content we see,
our emotional responses.
conspiratorial explanations
is far more effective.
is attached to attention,
will always be skewed towards emotion.
I'm talking about here is legal.
child sexual abuse imagery
to post an outright lie.
"problematic" or "harmful" content,
of what they mean by that,
regulation to moderate speech.
we're seeing governments
much more serious consequences
which speech to take up or take down,
of pieces of content
right around the world
of different cultural contexts.
effective mechanisms
or by technology.
Google, Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp --
information ecosystem.
at their feet, but the truth is,
can also play an equal role
when they want to.
divisive or misleading content
at a massive scale, internet scale,
they're used to operating at that level.
to fix these problems?
we don't want global corporations
and fairness online.
would agree with that.
they're marking their own homework.
they're rolling out are working,
their own transparency reports,
verify what's actually happening.
that most of the changes we see
undertake an investigation
their community guidelines.
a really important role in this process,
that global regulation is our last hope
our information ecosystem.
who are struggling to keep up to date
on these platforms.
would we trust to do this?
not a national one.
these technologies every day.
to support quality information?
what we might be able to actually do.
about bringing the public into this,
from Wikipedia?
that with the right structures,
and lots and lots of transparency,
that will earn the trust of most people.
to tap into the collective wisdom
for women, people of color
to hate and disinformation,
of these campaigns for so long.
they've been raising flags,
can actually provide insights?
difficult content-moderation decisions.
they want to roll out new changes.
with the information is personalized.
is very different to yours.
are very different to mine.
to actually examine
open repository for anonymized data,
concerns built in?
of concerned citizens
their social data to science.
of hate and disinformation
carried out in the US,
this is a global problem.
start-up or government,
right around the world
academia, activist groups.
of content credibility.
can be down-ranked by the platforms.
to found, First Draft,
newsrooms around the world
collaborative programs.
called The Underlay,
of all public statements of fact
can better judge what is credible.
are testing different techniques
critical of the content they consume.
but they're working in silos,
of very smart people
can feel disjointed,
different solutions to the same problems.
to bring people together
for days or weeks at a time,
these problems together
ambitious response,
and the complexity of the problem?
our information commons.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Claire Wardle - Misinformation expertClaire Wardle is an expert on user-generated content and verification working to help improve the quality of information online.
Why you should listen
Claire Wardle is the executive director of First Draft, a nonprofit dedicated to educating journalists about reporting in an age of information disorder. Previously, she was a research fellow at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School; the research director at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia Journalism School; the head of social media for the UN Refugee Agency; and director of news services for Storyful. Wardle holds a PhD in communication and an MA in political science from the University of Pennsylvania.
Claire Wardle | Speaker | TED.com