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LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO EXPAND FACT-CHECKING As news organizations adapt to the digital age, they’re turning to artificial intelligence to help human journalists produce the content consumers need. This is especially true in fact-checking. Because politicians often repeat claims – even after they have been debunked – AI can help hold the politicians accountable by quickly finding relevant fact-checks. This technology Continued POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued FACT-CHECKING APPS FROM POLITIFACT, THE WASHINGTON POST GlennKessler. GlennKessler, available for free download on Apple’s app store, is an aggregation of fact-checks from Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post’s Fact Checker. Kessler’s son, Hugo, created the app when he was 16 years old. Users of GlennKessler can view fact-checked claims and filter them according to the number of“Pinocchios
HOME - DUKE REPORTERS' LAB The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics.LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO EXPAND FACT-CHECKING As news organizations adapt to the digital age, they’re turning to artificial intelligence to help human journalists produce the content consumers need. This is especially true in fact-checking. Because politicians often repeat claims – even after they have been debunked – AI can help hold the politicians accountable by quickly finding relevant fact-checks. This technology Continued POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued FACT-CHECKING APPS FROM POLITIFACT, THE WASHINGTON POST GlennKessler. GlennKessler, available for free download on Apple’s app store, is an aggregation of fact-checks from Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post’s Fact Checker. Kessler’s son, Hugo, created the app when he was 16 years old. Users of GlennKessler can view fact-checked claims and filter them according to the number of“Pinocchios
ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
ABOUT THE LAB
Mark Stencel. Mark Stencel is NPR's former managing editor for digital news and co-author of The Goat Must Be Fed, a 2014 Duke Reporters' Lab study on obstacles to newsroom innovation.He previously held senior editing and executive positions at the Washington Post and Congressional Quarterly, and was a reporter for the the News & Observer in Raleigh-Durham, N.C. FACT-CHECKING COUNT TOPS 300 FOR THE FIRST TIME The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the current worldwide POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part THE NUMBER OF FACT-CHECKERS AROUND THE WORLD: 156... AND The number of active fact-checking projects around the world now stands at 156, with steady growth driven by expanding networks and new media partnerships that focus on holding public figures and organizations accountable for what they say. And elections this year in the United States and around the globe mean that number will likelyincrease Continued
DUKE STUDY FINDS FACT-CHECKING GROWING AROUND THE WORLD With sites such as Faktomat in Germany, Chequeado in Argentina and Les Decodeurs in France, political fact-checking is expanding rapidly around the globe, according to a new analysis by the Duke University Reporters’ Lab. The study found 59 sites that have done fact-checking in the last few years, including 44 currently active. More than two-thirds ContinuedTECH & CHECK
Tech & Check Cooperative. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative is a $1.2 million project to automate fact-checking. Launched in September 2017, the two-year endeavor brings together journalists, developers and academics to build apps to disseminate fact-checking to new audiences and create tools that help fact-checkers do their work. LIVE FACT-CHECKING OF THE STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS WITH FactStream is available for iPhone and iPad (sorry, no Android version yet!) and is a free download from the App Store. The live event feature for the State of the Union address is marked by an icon of calendar with a check mark. The app has two streams. One, shown by the home symbol in the lower left of the screen, provides a constantstream
PUBLIC RADIO LISTENERS WANT MORE FACT-CHECKING IN ELECTION Of those, 14 are affiliated with radio or TV news companies. But only two are public broadcasters — PolitiFact California, which is run by Capital Public Radio in Sacramento, and NPR, which launched a new fact-checking feature called “Break It Down” last fall. A third, Minnesota Public Radio’s PoliGraph, has been inactive since June. TALKING POINT TRACKER: A PROJECT TO SPOT HOT TOPICS AS When fact-checking technologists and journalists gather in Durham for the 2019 Tech & Check Conference this month, they will share new tools intended to optimize and automate fact-checking. For Dan Schultz, one founder of the Bad Idea Factory software development collective, this will be a chance to debut a “mannequin” version of the Talking Point Tracker. Continued HOME - DUKE REPORTERS' LAB The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics.LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO EXPAND FACT-CHECKING As news organizations adapt to the digital age, they’re turning to artificial intelligence to help human journalists produce the content consumers need. This is especially true in fact-checking. Because politicians often repeat claims – even after they have been debunked – AI can help hold the politicians accountable by quickly finding relevant fact-checks. This technology Continued POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued FACT-CHECKING APPS FROM POLITIFACT, THE WASHINGTON POST GlennKessler. GlennKessler, available for free download on Apple’s app store, is an aggregation of fact-checks from Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post’s Fact Checker. Kessler’s son, Hugo, created the app when he was 16 years old. Users of GlennKessler can view fact-checked claims and filter them according to the number of“Pinocchios
HOME - DUKE REPORTERS' LAB The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics.LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO EXPAND FACT-CHECKING As news organizations adapt to the digital age, they’re turning to artificial intelligence to help human journalists produce the content consumers need. This is especially true in fact-checking. Because politicians often repeat claims – even after they have been debunked – AI can help hold the politicians accountable by quickly finding relevant fact-checks. This technology Continued POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued FACT-CHECKING APPS FROM POLITIFACT, THE WASHINGTON POST GlennKessler. GlennKessler, available for free download on Apple’s app store, is an aggregation of fact-checks from Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post’s Fact Checker. Kessler’s son, Hugo, created the app when he was 16 years old. Users of GlennKessler can view fact-checked claims and filter them according to the number of“Pinocchios
ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
ABOUT THE LAB
Mark Stencel. Mark Stencel is NPR's former managing editor for digital news and co-author of The Goat Must Be Fed, a 2014 Duke Reporters' Lab study on obstacles to newsroom innovation.He previously held senior editing and executive positions at the Washington Post and Congressional Quarterly, and was a reporter for the the News & Observer in Raleigh-Durham, N.C. FACT-CHECKING COUNT TOPS 300 FOR THE FIRST TIME The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the current worldwide POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part THE NUMBER OF FACT-CHECKERS AROUND THE WORLD: 156... AND The number of active fact-checking projects around the world now stands at 156, with steady growth driven by expanding networks and new media partnerships that focus on holding public figures and organizations accountable for what they say. And elections this year in the United States and around the globe mean that number will likelyincrease Continued
DUKE STUDY FINDS FACT-CHECKING GROWING AROUND THE WORLD With sites such as Faktomat in Germany, Chequeado in Argentina and Les Decodeurs in France, political fact-checking is expanding rapidly around the globe, according to a new analysis by the Duke University Reporters’ Lab. The study found 59 sites that have done fact-checking in the last few years, including 44 currently active. More than two-thirds ContinuedTECH & CHECK
Tech & Check Cooperative. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative is a $1.2 million project to automate fact-checking. Launched in September 2017, the two-year endeavor brings together journalists, developers and academics to build apps to disseminate fact-checking to new audiences and create tools that help fact-checkers do their work. LIVE FACT-CHECKING OF THE STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS WITH FactStream is available for iPhone and iPad (sorry, no Android version yet!) and is a free download from the App Store. The live event feature for the State of the Union address is marked by an icon of calendar with a check mark. The app has two streams. One, shown by the home symbol in the lower left of the screen, provides a constantstream
PUBLIC RADIO LISTENERS WANT MORE FACT-CHECKING IN ELECTION Of those, 14 are affiliated with radio or TV news companies. But only two are public broadcasters — PolitiFact California, which is run by Capital Public Radio in Sacramento, and NPR, which launched a new fact-checking feature called “Break It Down” last fall. A third, Minnesota Public Radio’s PoliGraph, has been inactive since June. TALKING POINT TRACKER: A PROJECT TO SPOT HOT TOPICS AS When fact-checking technologists and journalists gather in Durham for the 2019 Tech & Check Conference this month, they will share new tools intended to optimize and automate fact-checking. For Dan Schultz, one founder of the Bad Idea Factory software development collective, this will be a chance to debut a “mannequin” version of the Talking Point Tracker. Continued HOME - DUKE REPORTERS' LAB The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics.LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO EXPAND FACT-CHECKING As news organizations adapt to the digital age, they’re turning to artificial intelligence to help human journalists produce the content consumers need. This is especially true in fact-checking. Because politicians often repeat claims – even after they have been debunked – AI can help hold the politicians accountable by quickly finding relevant fact-checks. This technology Continued POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued FACT-CHECKING APPS FROM POLITIFACT, THE WASHINGTON POST GlennKessler. GlennKessler, available for free download on Apple’s app store, is an aggregation of fact-checks from Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post’s Fact Checker. Kessler’s son, Hugo, created the app when he was 16 years old. Users of GlennKessler can view fact-checked claims and filter them according to the number of“Pinocchios
HOME - DUKE REPORTERS' LAB The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics.LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO EXPAND FACT-CHECKING As news organizations adapt to the digital age, they’re turning to artificial intelligence to help human journalists produce the content consumers need. This is especially true in fact-checking. Because politicians often repeat claims – even after they have been debunked – AI can help hold the politicians accountable by quickly finding relevant fact-checks. This technology Continued POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued FACT-CHECKING APPS FROM POLITIFACT, THE WASHINGTON POST GlennKessler. GlennKessler, available for free download on Apple’s app store, is an aggregation of fact-checks from Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post’s Fact Checker. Kessler’s son, Hugo, created the app when he was 16 years old. Users of GlennKessler can view fact-checked claims and filter them according to the number of“Pinocchios
ANNUAL CENSUS FINDS NEARLY 300 FACT-CHECKING PROJECTS With elections, unrest and a global pandemic generating a seemingly endless supply of falsehoods, the Duke Reporters’ Lab finds at least 290 fact-checking projects are busy debunking those threats in 83 countries. That count is up from 188 active projects in more than 60 countries a year ago, when the Reporters’ Lab issued the annualContinued
ABOUT THE LAB
Mark Stencel. Mark Stencel is NPR's former managing editor for digital news and co-author of The Goat Must Be Fed, a 2014 Duke Reporters' Lab study on obstacles to newsroom innovation.He previously held senior editing and executive positions at the Washington Post and Congressional Quarterly, and was a reporter for the the News & Observer in Raleigh-Durham, N.C. FACT-CHECKING COUNT TOPS 300 FOR THE FIRST TIME The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the current worldwide POP-UP FACT-CHECKING MOVES ONLINE: LESSONS FROM OUR USER We initially wanted to build pop-up fact-checking for a TV screen. But for nearly a year, people have told us in surveys and in coffee shops that they like live fact-checking but they need more information than they can get on a TV. The testing is a key part THE NUMBER OF FACT-CHECKERS AROUND THE WORLD: 156... AND The number of active fact-checking projects around the world now stands at 156, with steady growth driven by expanding networks and new media partnerships that focus on holding public figures and organizations accountable for what they say. And elections this year in the United States and around the globe mean that number will likelyincrease Continued
DUKE STUDY FINDS FACT-CHECKING GROWING AROUND THE WORLD With sites such as Faktomat in Germany, Chequeado in Argentina and Les Decodeurs in France, political fact-checking is expanding rapidly around the globe, according to a new analysis by the Duke University Reporters’ Lab. The study found 59 sites that have done fact-checking in the last few years, including 44 currently active. More than two-thirds ContinuedTECH & CHECK
Tech & Check Cooperative. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative is a $1.2 million project to automate fact-checking. Launched in September 2017, the two-year endeavor brings together journalists, developers and academics to build apps to disseminate fact-checking to new audiences and create tools that help fact-checkers do their work. LIVE FACT-CHECKING OF THE STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS WITH FactStream is available for iPhone and iPad (sorry, no Android version yet!) and is a free download from the App Store. The live event feature for the State of the Union address is marked by an icon of calendar with a check mark. The app has two streams. One, shown by the home symbol in the lower left of the screen, provides a constantstream
PUBLIC RADIO LISTENERS WANT MORE FACT-CHECKING IN ELECTION Of those, 14 are affiliated with radio or TV news companies. But only two are public broadcasters — PolitiFact California, which is run by Capital Public Radio in Sacramento, and NPR, which launched a new fact-checking feature called “Break It Down” last fall. A third, Minnesota Public Radio’s PoliGraph, has been inactive since June. TALKING POINT TRACKER: A PROJECT TO SPOT HOT TOPICS AS When fact-checking technologists and journalists gather in Durham for the 2019 Tech & Check Conference this month, they will share new tools intended to optimize and automate fact-checking. For Dan Schultz, one founder of the Bad Idea Factory software development collective, this will be a chance to debut a “mannequin” version of the Talking Point Tracker. Continued HOME - DUKE REPORTERS' LAB The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics.LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued FACT-CHECKING COUNT TOPS 300 FOR THE FIRST TIME The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the current worldwideTECH & CHECK
Tech & Check Cooperative. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative is a $1.2 million project to automate fact-checking. Launched in September 2017, the two-year endeavor brings together journalists, developers and academics to build apps to disseminate fact-checking to new audiences and create tools that help fact-checkers do their work. FACT-CHECKING TRIPLES OVER FOUR YEARS The number of fact-checkers around the world has more than tripled over the past four years, increasing from 44 to 149 since the Duke Reporters’ Lab first began counting these projects in 2014 — a 239 percent increase. And many of those fact-checkers in 53 countries are also showing considerable staying power. WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued DUKE REPORTERS' LAB ANNOUNCES FUNDING FOR TECH & CHECK The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Facebook Journalism Project and the Craig Newmark Foundation are awarding grants to the Duke University Reporters’ Lab for a $1.2 million project to automate fact-checking. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative will bring together teams from universities and the Internet Archive to developnew ways
HOME - DUKE REPORTERS' LAB The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics.LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the currentFACT- CHECKING
The Reporters’ Lab maintains a database of global fact-checking sites. You can use the map to explore sites around the world or use the menu below. (Here’s more how we identify fact-checkers.) HOW WE IDENTIFY FACT-CHECKERS Updated: July 9, 2020. The database of global fact-checking sites is a project of the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.. The database and related map is managed by Mark Stencel, a journalism faculty member at Duke and co-director of the Lab, and Joel Luther, a researcher who also works on technology projects that extend the reach and impact WHAT IS MEDIAREVIEW? MediaReview is a schema – a tagging system that web publishers can use to identify different kinds of content. Built specifically for fact-checkers to identify manipulated images and videos, we think of it as a sibling to ClaimReview, the schema developed by the Reporters’ Lab that allows fact-checkers to identify their articles for search engines Continued FACT-CHECKING COUNT TOPS 300 FOR THE FIRST TIME The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the current worldwideTECH & CHECK
Tech & Check Cooperative. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative is a $1.2 million project to automate fact-checking. Launched in September 2017, the two-year endeavor brings together journalists, developers and academics to build apps to disseminate fact-checking to new audiences and create tools that help fact-checkers do their work. FACT-CHECKING TRIPLES OVER FOUR YEARS The number of fact-checkers around the world has more than tripled over the past four years, increasing from 44 to 149 since the Duke Reporters’ Lab first began counting these projects in 2014 — a 239 percent increase. And many of those fact-checkers in 53 countries are also showing considerable staying power. WHY HE DID IT: JAYSON BLAIR OPENS UP ABOUT HIS PLAGIARISM Jayson Blair, a former New York Times reporter who is famous for the wrong reasons, stood in front of a class of Duke undergraduates Monday. “There are no real ground rules,” he said. “You can ask me anything you want.” There was an awkward pause. The students looked at each other, waiting for someone else Continued DUKE REPORTERS' LAB ANNOUNCES FUNDING FOR TECH & CHECK The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Facebook Journalism Project and the Craig Newmark Foundation are awarding grants to the Duke University Reporters’ Lab for a $1.2 million project to automate fact-checking. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative will bring together teams from universities and the Internet Archive to developnew ways
LATEST NEWS
The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the current FACT-CHECKING COUNT TOPS 300 FOR THE FIRST TIME The number of active fact-checkers around the world has topped 300 — about 100 more than the Duke Reporters’ Lab counted this time a year ago.. Some of that growth is due to the 2020 election in the United States, where the Lab’s global database and map now finds 58 fact-checking projects. That’s more than twice as many as any other country, and nearly a fifth of the current worldwide FACT-CHECKING TRIPLES OVER FOUR YEARS The number of fact-checkers around the world has more than tripled over the past four years, increasing from 44 to 149 since the Duke Reporters’ Lab first began counting these projects in 2014 — a 239 percent increase. And many of those fact-checkers in 53 countries are also showing considerable staying power. INTERNATIONAL FACT-CHECKING GAINS GROUND, DUKE CENSUS The number of active fact-checking projects increased more than two and half times since the Duke Reporters’ Lab began its annual census three years ago. The current count is up 19 percent from 2016, when the number of active fact-checkers was 96. Nineteen of the fact-checkers started in 2016. That includes 10 in the United States,seven of
STRUCTURED JOURNALISM Structured journalism is a growing form of journalism that publishes news content as entries in a database, enabling users to explore the content in ways that reveal trends and patterns and create new stories and visualizations. Instead of a single news story that repeats material from previous stories, structured journalism often uses short updates about the new developments that can be A BETTER CLAIMREVIEW TO GROW A GLOBAL FACT-CHECK DATABASE A revised ClaimReview may help more log their fact-checks into a growing, global database. ClaimReview was created in 2015 after a conversation between staff at Google and Glenn Kessler, the Washington Post fact-checker. Kessler wanted Google to highlight fact-checks in its search results. Bill Adair, director of the Duke Reporters’ Lab,was
FACTSTREAM APP TO PROVIDE LIVE FACT-CHECKING OF STATE OF The Duke Reporters’ Lab is seeking beta testers for FactStream, our new second-screen app that will provide live fact-checking during political events. On Tuesday, Jan. 30, the Reporters’ Lab will partner with PolitiFact, The Washington Post and FactCheck.org, which will provide FactStream users with live fact-checking of PresidentTrump
FACTSTREAM: FEEDBACK ON LIVE FACT-CHECKING APP AFTER STATE Our goal for our State of the Union test was simple. We wanted to let fact-checkers compose their own checks and see how users liked the app. We invited users to fill out a short form or email us with their feedback. The response was quite positive. “I loved it — it was timely in getting ‘facts’ out, easy to use, and informative!”. A BIG YEAR FOR FACT-CHECKING, BUT NOT FOR NEW U.S. FACT One was Indy Fact Check. It’s a project of The Nevada Independent, a nonprofit news site based in Las Vegas. The Independent got its feet wet in January with a look at the accuracy of Gov. Brian Sandoval’s 2017 State of the State address before launching a regular fact-checking series in June. An “Almost Abe” rating from IndyFact Check
THE BALONEY METER, THE CANADIAN PRESS FACT-CHECKING EFFORT The Canadian Press fact-checks explore important topics and are backed by thorough research. “A little baloney” on the Baloney Meter means “the statement is mostly accurate but more information is required.”. The Baloney Meter can be “silly, but the piece itself is the furthest thing from being silly,” Scoffield said.* Latest News
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The Reporters’ Lab is a center for journalism research in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. Our core projects focus on fact-checking, but we also do occasional research about trust in the news media and other topics. Our projects include: A guide to the world’s fact-checkers . We maintain a database of fact-checking sites and publish an annual census. The Duke Tech & Check Cooperative , a two-year research project to automate fact-checking, funded by Knight Foundation, Facebook and Craig Newmark. Analysis about trends and advances in fact-checking, including articles written by our students,staff and faculty.
The Reporters’ Lab is part of the DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy at the Sanford School.Search for:
* Fact-Checking News FACT-CHECKING COUNT TOPS 300 FOR THE FIRST TIME THE REPORTERS' LAB FINDS FACT-CHECKERS AT WORK IN 84 COUNTRIES -- BUT GROWTH IN THE U.S. HAS SLOWED By Mark Stencel & Joel Luther– October 13,
2020
* Fact-Checking News ‘IT’S GREAT TO BE HERE IN NORWAY!’ FOR THE KICKOFF OF GLOBAL FACT 7, A CELEBRATION OF THE IFCN'SCOMMUNITY.
By Bill Adair – June 22,2020
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