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Facebook's WhatsApp Flooded With Fake News in Brazil Election


A woman checks her mobile phone in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Aug. 28, 2018. A consortium of news organizations in Brazil is working to debunk rumors and misinformation circulating on WhatsApp, a wildly popular messaging service that is difficult to police because users share messages privately.
A woman checks her mobile phone in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Aug. 28, 2018. A consortium of news organizations in Brazil is working to debunk rumors and misinformation circulating on WhatsApp, a wildly popular messaging service that is difficult to police because users share messages privately.

Facebook Inc.'s popular WhatsApp messaging service has become a political battleground in Brazil's most polarized election in decades, raising concerns
that it is distorting debate beyond the public eye.

Facebook has touted efforts to crack down on misinformation on its main platform ahead of the Oct. 28 presidential runoff between right-winger Jair Bolsonaro and leftist Fernando Haddad.

But WhatsApp has been flooded with falsehoods and conspiracy theories.

Haddad now alleges that businessmen supporting Bolsonaro have been paying to bombard voters with misleading propaganda in violation of electoral law, which his rival denies.

Social media's influence

WhatsApp has more than 120 million users in Brazil, a country of nearly 210 million, rivaling the reach of Facebook's main platform in one of the company's biggest global markets.

The messaging service has become one of the main ways Brazilians keep in touch with friends, colleagues and family.

The election's first-round vote on Oct. 7 underscored the major role that social media now play in Brazilian politics.

FILE - Presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro is pictured during a meeting with Rio de Janeiro's Archbishop Dom Orani Tempesta in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 17, 2018.
FILE - Presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro is pictured during a meeting with Rio de Janeiro's Archbishop Dom Orani Tempesta in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 17, 2018.

Bolsonaro, a seven-term congressman from a tiny party, had little access to public campaign funding or TV advertising, but his grass-roots campaign and outsized presence on social media helped him win 46 percent of the vote, nearly forgoing a runoff.

Polling firm Datafolha found that two-thirds of Brazilian voters use WhatsApp. Bolsonaro supporters were more likely to follow political news on the platform, with 61 percent saying they did so, compared with 38 percent of Haddad voters.

Campaign ammunition

WhatsApp's end-to-end encryption allows groups of hundreds of users to exchange texts, photos and video beyond the purview of electoral authorities, independent fact checkers or even the platform itself.

False rumors, manipulated photos, decontextualized videos and audio hoaxes have become campaign ammunition, going viral on the platform with no way to monitor their origin or full reach.

Many of the fakes portray Haddad as a communist whose Workers' Party would turn Brazil into another Cuba, convert children to homosexuality and rig voting machines.

Others have spread a conspiracy theory that Bolsonaro had staged his near-fatal stabbing at a rally last month, which took him off the campaign trail and out of presidential debates.

WhatsApp has tried to discourage the tsunami of falsehoods by limiting how many recipients a message can be forwarded to.

The company also has run public advertising on how to spot fake news and has blocked hundreds of thousands of accounts during the campaign, with technology spotting automated "bot" behavior.

FILE - A woman takes a photo with Fernando Haddad, presidential candidate of Brazil's leftist Workers' Party, after a celebration in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Oct. 12, 2018.
FILE - A woman takes a photo with Fernando Haddad, presidential candidate of Brazil's leftist Workers' Party, after a celebration in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Oct. 12, 2018.

'Abuse of economic power'

Haddad accuses Bolsonaro of not just benefiting from misinformation on WhatsApp but encouraging supporters to fund bulk messaging over the platform. That would amount to soliciting illegal campaign contributions in what they call an "abuse of economic power" undermining the election.

On Thursday, newspaper Folha de S.Paulo reported Bolsonaro supporters had paid digital marketing firms up to 12 million reais ($3.26 million) each to spread tens of thousands of attack ads. Haddad said his party had witnesses who heard Bolsonaro encouraging business leaders to fund the efforts.

Bolsonaro has denied any knowledge of such a scheme and called on any supporters doing so to stop.

WhatsApp said it takes the allegations seriously and is "taking immediate legal action to stop companies from sending bulk messages," including cease-and-desist letters to the companies in question.

Consequences

Brazil's chief electoral court on Friday opened an investigation into the allegations, which pundits quickly labeled "WhatsAppgate."

Haddad's allies argue that the scandal should invalidate the election. However, the investigation is unlikely to derail Bolsonaro's campaign with just a week to go before the vote and an 18 percentage-point lead over Haddad in recent opinion polls.

Still, the allegations have inflamed an already angry and polarized electorate and are likely to hang over the next government.

The way marketing companies obtained cellphone numbers used for WhatsApp messaging may have violated Brazil's data privacy laws, according to Fabio Malini, a professor of technology at Espirito Santo federal university.

Brazilian lawmakers and judges have tried repeatedly in recent years to encroach on the privacy offered by WhatsApp, creating headaches for Facebook executives who are often called to account. The latest electoral scandal could intensify those pressures.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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