The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has charged Google and Meta, owners of Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram, on the need to checkmate the spread of fake news and disinformation on their platforms ahead of the 2023 general elections.
The Minister according to a statement signed by his media aid, Mr. Set in Adeyemi made the call in Abuja on Friday during a meeting with representatives of Meta and Google, which owns YouTube and other platforms, in his office.
“It is no longer news that the use of social media is now a critical factor in national elections, and no nation, including Nigeria is immune. With a predominantly youthful population, Nigeria ranks among the countries with the highest number of users of the various social media platforms, especially Whatsapp, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and TikTok.
”The use, or misuse, of these platforms is therefore of great concern to all stakeholders in the elections, and that’s why we have invite you here, so we can all jointly work to ensure a responsible use of these platforms so that they don’t become the platforms of choice for purveyors of fake news and disinformation,” he said.
Alhaji Mohammed said the government has noticed how some unscrupulous people are using parody accounts, cloning of reputable media platforms and the use of deep fakes to carry out their nefarious activities.
“For example, candidates’ campaign speeches are doctored to portray them in bad light, video clips and pictures of campaign rallies are tampered with to make them look poorly attended; fake unscientific opinion polls are concocted, while threats of violence in certain parts of the country are exaggerated – all of which are then circulated via social media to a wide audience, with the aim of making their target candidates look bad, influencing public perception or even suppressing votes in certain areas. In other words, there has been a gross abuse of social media platforms to purvey fake news and disinformation ahead of the elections,” he said.
He enjoined the two tech giants to onboard designated officials of the Ministry on their platforms so they can flag posts that constitute fake news and disinformation, with a view to having such flagged posts brought down.
He also urged them to work with the security agencies to bring down posts capable of inciting violence; requested that election results of originating from official sources should be flagged as unverified, while asking the platform owners to make posts from official channels, like the Ministry of Information and Culture, INEC, National Orientation Agency, etc., prominent on their platforms.
“These actions, if executed, will go a long way in checking the
proliferation of fake news and disinformation on social media ahead,
during and after the elections,” he said.
The representative of Google at the meeting, Dawn Dimowo, who manages Government Affairs and Public Policy, pledged the readiness of the platform to work with other stakeholders to ensure the credibility of the elections.
She said Google had trained about 6,000 journalists in addition to engaging and expanding the scope of fact-checking platforms such as Dubawa to identify and flag fake news.
On her part, Meta’s Head of Anglophone West Africa, Adaora Ikenze,
said the organization has set up an Election Protection Operating Centre, which has between 60 and 80 people who are working round-the-clock to ensure their platforms are not used to discredit the elections.
She said Meta had also instituted internal mechanisms, such as
WhatsApp Messages Sending Limits, in addition to making it possible
for people to report problematic contents to them directly.