DutchNews, March 3, 2017
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| Photo: Facebook |
Dutch news website Nu.nl
and a group of Master’s students from Leiden University are to work together
checking facts placed on Dutch Facebook pages, broadcaster NOS said.
The aim is
to weed out fake news which has been placed to deliberately misinform or for
financial gain, Facebook’s Europe media chief Patrick Walker told NOS. While it
is unclear how many fake news items are doing the rounds in the Netherlands,
‘we hope to find out through this initiative,’ he said.
Facebook has launched
similar initiatives in Germany and France. Posts which readers flag as being
potentially fake news will be checked by Nu.nl and Leiden’s Nieuwscheckers
group. If both agree it is fake, the item will be flagged as such.
‘The
aim is to give users more context, so they know better what they can trust and
share,’ Walker said. Posts which contain fake news will not be removed.
Elections
Several Dutch newspapers also have their own fact checking sections
in the run up to the March 15 general election. The NRC Checkt section on
Friday looked at claims by SP leader Emile Roemer that the Netherlands is the
biggest net payer into the EU coffers.
The paper concludes that Roemer is right
in terms of the proportion of national income. But Germany pays the biggest
single contribution and Sweden more per head of the population, the paper said.
The Volkskrant looks at claims by D66 leader Alexander Pechtol that the EU’s
treaty with Ukraine has been changed significantly by the prime minister’s
intervention. The paper concludes that the actual treaty itself has not been
altered.

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