Encouraging. 

https://www.blog.google/topics/journalism-news/expanding-fact-checking-google/

Expanding Fact Checking at Google
Richard Gingras
VP News Google

Over the years we’ve heard from Google News users that our efforts to label 
stories ranging from local to satire to user-generated have helped expand their 
view of what is happening in the world. Last October we added a new Fact Check 
tag to help people find news stories that have been fact checked, so they can 
understand the value of what they’re reading. Soon after, we introduced the tag 
in France and Germany.

Starting today, people in Brazil, Mexico and Argentina can see fact check 
tagged articles in the expanded story box on news.google.com and in the Google 
News & Weather iOS and Android apps.

 
Fact Check in Brazil
We’re also launching the fact check tag in these countries on news mode in 
Search. That means if you do a regular search and click the news tab, fact 
check articles will be elevated and annotated with the same fact check label 
that you would see in stories on Google News.

 
Fact Check in news mode in Search
We’re able to do this work because the fact check industry itself has 
grown—there are now more than 120 organizations involved in tackling this 
issue—but our commitment to this area is not new. In Europe over the last 
couple of years we’ve been working with publishers on a number of efforts 
focused on fact checking. Last week, we announced CrossCheck, a joint project 
involving nearly 20 French newsrooms and the First Draft Coalition to debunk 
myths pertaining to the upcoming French elections.

In addition, as part of the Digital Initiative Fund, we’ve provided support for 
more than 10 projects looking at fact checking and authentication, adding six 
new initiatives at the end of last year:

U.K.-based Full Fact is building an automated fact-checker tailored for 
journalists.
Scotland’s the Ferret is using funding to build up a formal fact checking 
operation in their newsroom in the wake of the EU referendum.
Factmata, developed at University College London and University of Sheffield, 
will use machine learning to build tools to help readers better understand 
claims made in digital media content, such as news articles and political 
speech transcripts.
In Italy, Catchy’s team of scientists and media analysts, has created Compass, 
a fact checking platform to call out misleading stories, rebut bad facts and 
connect news events to reliable information.
In France, Le Monde’s 13-person fact checking unit called Les Décodeurs has 
received funding for their Hoaxbuster Decodex project.
Norway’s ambitious Leserkritikk (“Reader Critic”) project, currently running 
its prototype on Dagbladet.no, lets readers give specific and structured 
feedback on facts, language and mistakes in published content. 
These projects clearly illustrate a desire for more of this work, and we’re 
eager to bring the fact check tag to other countries around the world. In order 
to make this a reality, we need your help. Publishers who would like to see 
their work appear with the Fact Check tag should use the open ClaimReview 
schema from schema.org in their stories.  Adding this markup allows Google to 
find these stories and highlight the fact checking work that has gone into 
them.  For more information, head on over to our help center.

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