"We
are committed to fighting the spread of false news on Facebook,
especially ahead of the 2019 General Election campaign season,"
Manish Khanduri, Facebook India's news partnership head, said in
the statement.
The coming election is expected to be a close fought battle
between Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the opposition Congress Party
and its regional allies.
Last week, Facebook said it was introducing stricter rules for
political advertisements in India.
The latest move to strengthen the fact checking program is aimed
at verifying the accuracy of stories and preventing the spread
of hoaxes.
Five new partners, including the India Today Group, a leading
local media house, have been added to Facebook's fact-checker
network, taking the total number to seven, the statement said.
And the program has been broadened to cover services in more
Indian languages, so that it will now cover English and five
local languages, the statement added.
India is Facebook's largest market by users, and its WhatsApp
messaging service has more than 200 million users in the country
thanks to the advent of cheap mobile data and increasing
penetration of smartphones.
Aside from concerns over misuse of social media for political
purposes, there has also been criticism over the spread of
false, incendiary messages that have fanned communal tensions
and sparked mob violence.
Last year, after a series of lynchings were incited by messages
sent on its service, WhatsApp reduced the number of people or
groups that a message could be forwarded to at one time, cutting
it to five from 20 previously. WhatsApp has since moved to make
that its norm worldwide.
Facebook's main rival in India, Alphabet Inc's Google, has also
conducted scores of workshops across the country to train
journalists to verify news.
(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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