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Facebook to step up fact-checking in fight against fake news

Facebook is to send more potential hoax articles to third-party fact checkers and show their findings below the original post, the world's largest online social network said on Thursday as it tries to fight so-called fake news.

Update to related articles feature is launching in U.S., France, the Netherlands and Germany

Facebook is expanding testing begun earlier this year to detect possible hoaxes and send them to fact checkers, potentially showing fact-checking results under the original article. (Issouf Sanogo/AFP/Getty Images)
Facebook is to send more potential hoax articles to third-party fact checkers and showtheir findings below the original post, the world's largestonline social network said on Thursday as it tries to fightso-called fake news.

The company said in a statement on its website it will startusing updated machine learning to detect possible hoaxes andsend them to fact checkers, potentially showing fact-checkingresults under the original article.

It's a further roll out of testing started in April.

Facebook has been criticized as being one of the maindistribution points for so-called fake news, which many thinkinfluenced the 2016 U.S. presidential election. The issue has also become a big political topic in Europe,with French voters deluged with false stories ahead of thepresidential election in May and Germany backing a plan to finesocial media networks if they fail to remove hateful postingspromptly, ahead of elections there in September.

On Thursday Facebook said in a separate statement in Germanthat a test of the new fact-checking feature was being launchedin the United States, France, the Netherlands and Germany.

"In addition to seeing which stories are disputed bythird-party fact checkers, people want more context to makeinformed decisions about what they read and share," said SaraSu, Facebook news feed product manager, in a blog.

She added that Facebook would keep testing its "relatedarticle" feature, which suggests additional articles on the same topic from different viewpoints or outlets, and work on other changes to its news feed tocut down on false news.