Vaccine-Skeptical News Article Was Facebooks Most Popular Post Earlier This Year
The most popular link viewed on Facebook earlier this year was an article that suggested a Florida doctor may have died from a coronavirus vaccine, according to a new report from the social media giant amid growing concerns that Facebook is enabling the spread of COVID-19 misinformation.
The article, which amassed more than 53.8 million views between Jan. 1 and March 31, suggested that the doctorâs death was âpossibly the nationâs first death linked to the vaccine.â
The article originally appeared in the South Florida Sun Sentinel in January, and was widely shared by the Chicago Tribune on Facebook. The story was later updated after the vaccineâs role in the 56-year-old manâs death was ruled inconclusive by a medical examiner.
The articleâs massive popularity was revealed in a first-quarter âContent Transparency Reportâ that was shared publicly on Saturday by Facebook spokesperson Andy Stone, after The New York Times reported that the document had been quietly shelved over concerns that it would make the company look bad.
https://t.co/n1OwJLC5y2
â" Andy Stone (@andymstone) August 21, 2021Earlier in the week, Facebook released a separate set of findings, âWidely Viewed Content Report: What People See on Facebook,â that covered content from April 1 to June 30. This report, which listed far more harmless content at the top of its popularity lists, had been labeled as a first-quarter report, according to the Times, but now says âQ2 2021â at the top.
Stone shared a link to an âinternal copyâ of the previously undisclosed âContent Transparency Reportâ on Twitter. He said this reportâs findings hadnât been released sooner because âthere were key fixes to the system we wanted to make.â
âWeâre guilty of cleaning up our house a bit before we invited company. Weâve been criticized for that; and again, thatâs not unfair,â Stone tweeted on Saturday. He did not go into detail about the âfixesâ that allegedly led to the report being withheld. A representative for Facebook did not immediately respond to HuffPostâs request for comment Sunday.
San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images via Getty Images The popularity on Facebook of a vaccine-skeptical news article was revealed in a data report amid concerns that the company is enabling COVID-19 misinformation. There are questions about the data, however.When Facebook revealed its âWidely Viewed Content Reportâ last week, it said it was doing so because âtransparency is an important part of everything we do at Facebook.â
âOur goal is to provide clarity around what people see in their Facebook News Feed, the different content types that appear in their Feed and the most-viewed domains, links, Pages and posts on the platform during the quarter,â the company said.
There remains skepticism about the accuracy of the public data, however, including from former Facebook employees.
âYou canât trust a report that is curated by a company and designed to combat a press narrative rather than real meaningful transparency,â Brian Boland, a former vice president of product marketing at Facebook, told the Times. âItâs up to regulators and government officials to bring us that transparency.â
Another former Facebook employee, speaking anonymously to The Washington Post due to a nondisparagement clause, likened the companyâs report to âExxonMobil releasing their own study on climate change.â
You canât trust a report that is curated by a company and designed to combat a press narrative rather than real meaningful transparency. Brian Boland, former vice president of product marketing at FacebookâItâs something to counter the independent research and media coverage that tells a different story,â the former employee said.
There have been growing concerns about the spread of vaccine misinformation on social media platforms, with President Joe Biden last month going so far as to say that social media companies are âkilling people.â
âWeâre dealing with a life-or-death issue here, and so everybody has a role to play in making sure thereâs accurate information,â White House press secretary Jen Psaki said of Facebook in July. âTheyâre a private-sector company. Theyâre going to make decisions about additional steps they can take. Itâs clear there are more that can be taken.â
Facebook has repeatedly pledged to take more action against anti-vaccine information, but critics and skeptics have said the companyâs efforts donât go far enough, and have called for independent access to user activity data.
âItâs defensible on the part of Facebook that they want to protect the data of an everyday person,â Rachel Moran, a researcher studying COVID-19 social media misinformation at the University of Washington, told Recode. âBut in trying to understand actually how much misinformation is on Facebook, and how itâs being interacted with on a daily basis, we need to know more.â
AdvertisementU.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, whose office has described health misinformation as a threat to the nationâs COVID-19 response, has also warned of a crucial lack of data from social media companies.
âThe data gap means we are flying blind,â Murthy told Recode earlier this month. âWe donât know the extent of the problem. We donât know whatâs working to solve the problem. We donât know whoâs most impacted by the problem.â
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