Meta unveils new community notes program; will not apply distribution penalties nor limit flow of information

Meta to launch its community notes program next week. Meta officer Joel Kaplan says content with community notes won't be limited in distribution to users nor have penalties imposed.

Meta is launching its new community notes program.

Meta will begin by gradually and randomly admitting people off the waitlist and will take time to test the writing and rating system before any notes are published.

Meta will not decide what gets rated or what gets written but rather the contributors from the Facebook, Instagram and Threads communities, the company told Fox News Digital. 

"The third-party fact-checking program, in addition to the bias, had penalties attached to it, where if something was rated false, we would dramatically reduce its distribution," Kaplan continued. "And that turned a program that was intended to be about providing additional information into one that was essentially a censorship tool."

Meta’s third-party fact-checking program was put in place after the 2016 election and had been used to "manage content" and misinformation on its platforms, largely due to "political pressure," executives said, but they admitted the system had "gone too far."

"The community notes program is just about providing additional information and context so people can make their own decisions, but it doesn’t apply any distribution penalties or limit the flow of information through the algorithm," Kaplan said.

Under the third-party fact-checking program, fact-checked posts often had their distribution reduced across platforms. Meta said that will not be the case with posts that have community notes applied to them, and it will not affect who can see the content or how widely it can be shared. 

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Kaplan said Meta believes users "should see both the posts and then also the additional information to give them context about the post." 

"We want to make sure that the full range of information is provided," he said.

The community notes will be limited to 500 characters and will be written by contributors in the Meta community notes program. 

"Individual members of the community will write and submit notes, and then other members of the community will get to say, ‘Yeah, that looks right to me,’ within the system," he said. "And once the algorithm determines that it received a critical mass of support from people who usually disagree, that is the check on the bias."

"All the changes we made in January were in the service of returning to our roots of free expression, and the third-party fact-checking program has become an impediment to that," Kaplan said. "A community-based system that empowers our users to just provide additional information that people find helpful, I think, is a really big improvement on voice and expression on the platform." 

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As for who can contribute community notes, Meta told Fox News Digital that contributors must be over 18 years old and have an account that is more than six months old and in good standing. The user must also have either a verified phone number or be enrolled in two-factor authentication.

The community notes feature will be available in six languages commonly used in the United States to start, including English, Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese, French and Portuguese. Meta will expand to other languages down the line.

Brooke Singman is a political correspondent and reporter for Fox News Digital, Fox News Channel and FOX Business.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/exclusive-meta-unveils-new-community-notes-program-flagged-content-not-have-limited-distribution