Yuan Announce In Thursday’s blog post Accept registration About its community notes program on Facebook, Instagram and threads. The announcement comes after Meta News last month, which will end its third-party fact-check program and is moving instead Go to the community notes model Similar to X.
Meta explained in its blog post that community notes will be a way for users on their platform to determine when posts are misleading and allow them to add more context to their posts.
Starting today, people can sign up to be the first contributors to the program. To register, the user must be located in the United States and be over 18 years of age. Additionally, users must have an account over six months old and have good reputation, as well as a verified phone number or two-factor authentication registration.
Meta said contributors will be able to write and submit community notes for posts they consider misleading or confusing. Just like on X, comments can include background information, prompts, or other details that the user may find useful.
The comment will have a limit of 500 characters and must include a link.
“In order to post community notes on posts, it is often based on their past ratings, and it is helpful for users who disagree to disagree to the notes,” Meta explained. “When there is no agreement or people agree to the notes, the notes will not be Add to content.”
Meta said community notes will be written and evaluated by contributors, rather than written by the tech giant itself. All notes must comply with META’s community standards.
“We intend to inform our app about the comments displayed in our app on different perspectives and are sharing this information in the right way,” Meta said.
The company plans to present community notes in the U.S. over the next few months. Meta plans to bring the feature to other countries and regions yet to share.
Meta’s decision to fact-check community notes is seen as the company’s repositioning of Trump’s presidency because it takes a way to support online unrestricted speeches. Mark Zuckerberg When Meta announces changes Say in the video These fact checkers are “politically biased” and destroy “more trust than they have created.”