The first step in the fact-checking process is to review news coverage and claims circulating online from media outlets, blogs, and social media accounts, and to identify cases of claims that may not be well-founded. However, the volume of content produced online at any given moment is far too large to examine manually.
This is where software is used to group new articles and social media posts in a way that allows us to review news coverage or social media posts much more easily, using filters that enable grouping.
This type of software is called “aggregators” and is one of the most basic tools in fact-checking. For articles published by media outlets and blogs, there are thousands of applications and websites that allow their content to be grouped by category.
However, while technological solutions for automating the discovery of potential topics for review are important tools, the most valuable resource is the public itself. Readers who use social media every day and come into contact with thousands of different pages and users may identify claims or articles that appear unfounded or inaccurate. They can then notify us by sending the link to the article or public post they found so that we can check the accuracy of the claim in question. Because, as noted above, the volume of information circulating online is impressively large, direct tips from readers greatly support our work.
Therefore, if you want to help us by sending topics you have identified and believe require examination, you can send us a message by email here, or by pressing the button at the bottom right to send a direct message to our Facebook page through Messenger.
To be effective in our work, and given the large amount of material to examine, we carefully select the topics we will cover. Specifically, we give priority to more serious or urgent misinformation issues, with emphasis on topics that may put people at risk, such as medical claims, target minority groups, or require immediate debunking, such as scams involving online contests that may disappear within a few days.
We do not debunk personal positions or opinions, nor cases of satire, but only specific claims. In addition, to maintain balance in our coverage of political topics or claims made by political figures, we try, as far as possible, to examine claims from across the political spectrum and avoid focusing on one party or one part of the spectrum. When any direct or indirect conflict of interest exists in an article, whether political or general, involving an author, an expert we consult for clarification, or a person from whom we request comment, this is stated explicitly in the interest of full transparency.