Introducing Verification Junkie

I am a verification junkie.

For the last three years I have been exploring and experimenting with how we can verify social media during breaking news. Today I’m launching a new site, Verification Junkie, as a growing directory of apps, tools, sites and strategies for verifying, fact checking and assessing the validity of social media and user-generated content.

Verification Junkie SlideAs breaking news moves from news bulletins to news feeds, and social media becomes an invaluable tool for citizens and journalists alike, it also presents unique challenges. In his piece, Twitter, Credibility and The Watertown Manhunt, Hong Qu argues that “Tools and processes for assessing source credibility need to catch up with ever evolving social media technology and culture.”

As Qu points out, there are two key forces we need to contend with as we think about social media and user-generated content verification: technology and culture. The new Verification Junkie site is aimed at the first half of that equation, the technology. On the site I will profile and link to useful, interesting and emerging tools and apps that citizens, journalists or newsrooms can use in their day-to-day work. The emphasis here is on the useful, concrete tools people are building to help assess the validity and accuracy of social media content – text, video and photos.

Verification Junkie is a work in progress and you can submit tips and ideas for the site via Twitter @jcstearns.

However, just having the tools won’t solve the problem if we don’t foster a culture that values verification. In general, people want to be trustworthy media makers and distributors of content. Indeed, during breaking news events many people take to social media to find a way to help, to lend aid, attention, or amplification to support those in crisis or spread the word about an important issue. For journalists and newsrooms, they want to serve their communities and keep their audience informed.

However, right now, online culture rewards being fast and flashy more than being right and careful. Analytics will tell you how many retweets you got, how many video views you earned, and how many page views you drove to your site, but analytics won’t distinguished between right and wrong. In many respects what’s needed is more media and digital literacy – being skeptical, assessing sources, fact checking. These are basic ideas, but social media demands we ask those questions in new ways. Now we need to know about metadata on photos, location data on tweets, and timestamps on videos.

When it comes to breaking news, our technology and our culture are intertwined. As the culture of our online communities are still being negotiated it is more important than ever that we model the kind of behavior we want to see.

Twitter provides a good example of this duality technology and culture in debates about verification and accuracy. Some argue that we – the users of Twitter – need to develop better practices and cultural norms around verification and correcting our errors (perhaps a twist on the shorthand that has been developed for “retweet” and “modified tweet”). Others argue we need better features or apps to help combat misinformation on the platform. Really, we need both.

Verification and misinformation isn’t one problem but two: 1) preventing errors and 2) correcting errors and limiting their spread. As such, we need a range of responses including, but not limited to: training, shifts in norms, new tools, better processes and forms of accountability. And, critically, these ideas and debates cannot stop at the newsroom, but must also engage the public, readers, and audiences who are active and critical participants in the networked journalism.

Verification Junkie is one contribution to that work. I hope you enjoy it.

(This project was inspired by the terrific “Tech and Tools” page maintained by Robert Hernandez)

4 Comments

  1. Kudos on this Josh. Solid layout on your pursuit, which is an undeniably worthwhile one.

    Agreed on that issue of misinformation can be approached through technology & culture.

  2. Tim Chambers says:

    Reblogged this on Tim Chambers and commented:
    Looks like a fascinating collection of tools from “Verification Junkie” — as he puts it: “a growing directory of apps, tools, sites and strategies for verifying, fact checking and assessing the validity of social media and user-generated content.”

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