Misinformation has spread worldwide and can be the catalyst for harmful individual and collective behaviors. In South Africa, the majority of citizens use social media platforms, such as Facebook and Whatsapp, which are used to spread misinformation. Researchers conducted a randomized evaluation to assess how fact-checks regularly sent to participants through WhatsApp can affect their ability to discern false information, as well as their beliefs and attitudes related to topics subject to viral misinformation, particularly Covid-19. Overall, the intervention improved participants’ ability to detect misinformation and somewhat increased their willingness to participate in Covid-19 safety measures, particularly when the intervention was delivered in the form of a short text or a podcast with empathetic language.
Misinformation has spread worldwide and can be the catalyst for harmful individual and collective behaviors. It has been linked to destructive actions across the globe, such as violence toward the Rohingya minority group in Myanmar1 and mob violence against discriminated groups in India.2 This phenomenon is particularly concerning in the Global South where citizens have limited access to independent sources of information, low digital literacy, and are increasingly reliant on social media for information.34
Fact-checking has become a popular strategy for disarming misinformation, leading to the establishment of many fact-checking institutions across the globe. A key feature of these institutions is their ability to regularly engage citizens over a sustained period with different types of fact-checking and verification methods, equipping citizens not only with facts but with lessons to distinguish credible information. However, previous research has focused on shorter one time efforts conducted in artificial lab or online settings and has been concentrated in high-income countries. Can providing citizens in non-high-income countries with sustained exposure to fact-checking reduce the dissemination of misinformation?
Misinformation has become a common phenomenon in South Africa, affecting citizens’ understanding about social, political, and health issues.56 This is fueled by the popularity of social media platforms such as Facebook and WhatsApp that can be key vehicles for spreading misinformation, as well as the high cost of mobile data that makes it challenging to access other news sources on the internet.
Researchers partnered with Africa Check, the first independent fact-checking institution serving sub-Saharan Africa since 2012,7 to deliver the fact-checking intervention. They recruited study participants through a Facebook advertisement, resulting in most participants to be between ages 18 to 50 years old, due eligibility constraints and the older population’s low use of social media. Otherwise, the study participants were roughly representative of the South African population in age, gender, ethnicity, education, and region. The demographics of participants matched closely to the characteristics of the latest South African Afrobarometer survey, an independent pan-African research network that provides high-quality data on African society.8
Researchers partnered with Africa Check to conduct a randomized evaluation to test how a consistent fact-checking program can affect citizens’ beliefs and attitudes related to topics that are subject to viral misinformation, as well as their ability to discern false information. These messages scrutinized largely false social media stories that were trending on South African social media on topics such as Covid-19, health remedies, politics and society, and other high-profile topics. Participants were recruited bi-weekly in batches through Facebook to receive three fact-checks through WhatsApp every two weeks over a six-month period. Researchers grouped participants by baseline characteristics to ensure each group had similar demographics, baseline social media consumption patterns, trust towards different news sources, and misinformation knowledge. Participants were then randomly assigned within each group to one of four methods of fact-check delivery or to a comparison group, ensuring that intervention groups had similar compositions. The interventions had the following components:9
The researchers randomly assigned half of the participants within each treatment group to also receive text within the messages highlighting the importance of fact-checking for common good to encourage the participant to read the message or listen to the podcast. To further encourage engagement, 83 percent of participants within each treatment arm were randomly assigned to receive a quiz about the fact-check and the remaining received an unrelated quiz about popular culture. All of the participants assigned to the comparison group received the unrelated quiz on popular culture.
At the end of the intervention period, the researchers surveyed the participants to measure discernment between true and false information and trust in different media sources; information consumption, verification, and social media sharing patterns; and attitudes and behaviors relating to Covid-19 and politics. The researchers combined measures from the survey responses to create overall outcome indexes.
Overall, some forms of the intervention improved participants' ability to detect misinformation and somewhat increased willingness to participate in Covid-19 safety measures. Simple and short text messaging, as well as podcasts with empathetic language, produced the greatest effects across the messaging varieties.
The study demonstrates the feasibility for using WhatsApp messaging to stimulate citizens to engage with fact-checking and approach news subject to misinformation more critically. Results suggested that direct and short forms of delivery were the most effective in driving impact, as opposed to longer-form delivery, unless empathetic language is explicitly added.
Based on the study results, Africa Check and the researchers are evaluating a similar project in Kenya and South Africa, utilizing the reach of social media influencers (high-profile journalists and social activists with large social media followings) to distribute both fact checks and digital literacy training. They aim to gather insights on the effectiveness in improving followers engagement with reliable content.