IAB’s Rothenberg Says Stopping Fake News Takes Real Resolve
by P.J. Bednarski, Staff Writer @pjbtweet, November 17, 2016
But unlike Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, who insists Facebook’s fake news didn’t have much affect the outcome, Rothenberg isn’t so sure of that, either.
Twitter says it will try to stop alt-right users. Likewise, on Monday, Google said it would stop ads from appearing on fake news sites–and on the same day carried a fake story claiming, falsely, that Donald Trump had earned 70,000 more votes than Hillary Clinton. The vote tally really shows she had narrowly received more popular votes than Trump.
Or actually, because they’re generated automatically?
For phony stuff that too easily gets passed around the Internet, “Marketers, agencies, technologists and publishers should realize it’s in their economic and social self-interest” to monitor and police what’s there.
“You can’t expect fake news sites to close themselves,” he said. “Bad shit always finds a way to circulate.”
Comparing the Internet to an old time newsstand, he said, the vendor never put the questionable nudie magazines “front and center. The bad things went under the counter.” The various elements that bring together a scurrilous Website with an advertiser and a platform aren’t doing the same thing.
It is a flaw of the the Internet–an almost baked-in flaw–that it moves at such technological super speed that it can seem out of control.
Rothenberg doesn’t seem to buy that. The cure is human intervention, while the goal of Internet businesses is efficiency. There’s the conflict
“Even the most automated assembly lines has a human being doing quality control behind them,” Rothenberg said. He doesn’t pretend to know the technologist-level ins and outs of how those safeguards could be built, only that they could be, suggesting Websites could create better algorithms to notice clues to help weed out many malicious interlopers. And employ humans to make sure it stays that way.
He concedes that could result in “an unending game of whack-a-mole. But if you ever spent a summer on the Boardwalk you learn that if you do it each and every day, pretty soon you get good at it.”
MediaPost.com: Search Marketing Daily
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