Community Moderation and the New Epistemology of Fact Checking on Social Media
Abstrak
Social media platforms have traditionally relied on internal moderation teams and partnerships with independent fact-checking organizations to identify and flag misleading content. Recently, however, platforms including X (formerly Twitter) and Meta have shifted towards community-driven content moderation by launching their own versions of crowd-sourced fact-checking -- Community Notes. If effectively scaled and governed, such crowd-checking initiatives have the potential to combat misinformation with increased scale and speed as successfully as community-driven efforts once did with spam. Nevertheless, general content moderation, especially for misinformation, is inherently more complex. Public perceptions of truth are often shaped by personal biases, political leanings, and cultural contexts, complicating consensus on what constitutes misleading content. This suggests that community efforts, while valuable, cannot replace the indispensable role of professional fact-checkers. Here we systemically examine the current approaches to misinformation detection across major platforms, explore the emerging role of community-driven moderation, and critically evaluate both the promises and challenges of crowd-checking at scale.
Penulis (16)
Isabelle Augenstein
Michiel Bakker
Tanmoy Chakraborty
David Corney
Emilio Ferrara
Iryna Gurevych
Scott Hale
Eduard Hovy
Heng Ji
Irene Larraz
Filippo Menczer
Preslav Nakov
Paolo Papotti
Dhruv Sahnan
Greta Warren
Giovanni Zagni
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Bahasa
- en
- Sumber Database
- arXiv
- Akses
- Open Access ✓