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Elon Musk To Fight Fake News, Rate Journalists' Credibility Via a Site Called 'Pravda' 314

Elon Musk took to Twitter today to announce his next project: a site called "Pravda" that ranks journalists' credibility and fights fake news. "Going to create a site where the public can rate the core truth of any article & track the credibility score over time of each journalist, editor & publication," tweeted Musk. "Thinking of calling it Pravda..." Musk continued: "Even if some of the public doesn't care about the credibility score, the journalists, editors & publications will. It is how they define themselves." A subsequent Twitter poll (exposed to mostly Musk followers) reveals that most people believe "this would be good."

Accredited journalist Mark Harris replied to the Tesla and SpaceX CEO with a copy of a Statement and Designation by Foreign Corporation form that names the Pravda Corp. "Er, he's not kidding folks," Harris tweeted. "I noticed that one of Musk's agents had incorporated Pravda Corp in California back in October last year. I was wondering what it was all about..."

GeekWire has catalogued a string of replies between Musk and Twitter users who are supportive/unsupportive of his plans.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Elon Musk To Fight Fake News, Rate Journalists' Credibility Via a Site Called 'Pravda'

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  • by llamalad ( 12917 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:06PM (#56662058)

    The same public that can't differentiate -or simply doesn't care about- the difference between fact and fake news?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      There's no way this will be exploited or abused by anyone with any sort of agenda.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        Seriously. I like most of Musk's projects, but this is counterproductive.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          I feel about this "Pravda" project the same way I felt about him joining Trump's business council - "This is not going to end well."

    • The public knows (Score:2, Insightful)

      by SuperKendall ( 25149 )

      The same public that can't differentiate -or simply doesn't care about- the difference between fact and fake news?

      The public has for a long time now been calling out and correcting the media on all sorts of stories. The public, far from "not being able to differentiate" has a better track record of understanding what is real and what is not, than the press itself has for some time...

      • A, THAT, public? That's probably not the public inclined to visit a website with the same name as the infamous communist propaganda newspaper.
        • by mentil ( 1748130 )

          Maybe that's secretly the point? That the average ignoramus is unlikely to pollute the site... at least until it's too late to do so. Then, like wikipedia, ordinary people find out about and start visiting it.

      • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )

        The same public that can't differentiate -or simply doesn't care about- the difference between fact and fake news?

        The public has for a long time now been calling out and blasting the media on all sorts of stories they don't like. The public, far from "not being able to read" has a track record of believing in aliens and conspiracy theories despite the press' attempts at clarification for some time now...

        FTFY

        In short, the public has proven a most untrustworthy source of determining anything real or accurate. Look at Pizzagate. Uranium One fantasies. The JFK assassination. Roswell. Aliens. The "fake" moon landing. The current focus on "fake news".

        Now where's your list that supports you in any way?

    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      Meta-moderation by paid researchers should be able to differentiate between users who are able to identify credible news and those who are not. Then you simply adjust the algorithms to either ignore them or even reverse their recommendations.

    • Not all the public is so easily fooled; one of the things I like about /. is that most of us are very critical thinkers.

      If his system allows people to rate the credibility of an article but then those users also have a credibility that gives them more or less weight I think the system can balance out. For example if I rate an article as very credible but then most people rate it as not very credible then my credibility would go down. Then when I rate other articles that rating has less impact because my ove

      • Slashdot commenters, like everyone else, suspend their critical thinking process when it's a political issue. The only thought that occurs is 'how can I shape the facts to the benefit of my side'.
    • The same public that believes the earth is flat, the moon landing was faked and that mass shooting victims are all actors.
    • Perhaps your "facts" are less uncontroversial than you imagined.

      • by llamalad ( 12917 )

        âoeNo one in this world, so far as I know â" and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me â" has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people. Nor has anyone ever lost public office thereby.â H. L. Mencken

  • So he will judge based on his biases. If he agrees with the position, positive karma. Otherwise, negative. Just like pretty much every other news outlet.

    Yeah, just like this, but replace "standards" with "news." https://xkcd.com/927/ [xkcd.com]

  • by Nethemas the Great ( 909900 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:15PM (#56662114)
    I think Elon is getting weird, weird even for Elon. I think the stress from Tesla might be cracking him. Pravda BTW is a Russian newspaper [wikipedia.org].
    • by Green Mountain Bot ( 4981769 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:18PM (#56662132)
      Pravda is the Russia word for Truth. This implementation promises to be every bit as ironic as the newspaper.
      • WHOOSH (Score:5, Insightful)

        by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @09:35PM (#56663008)

        You, like many other humorless Slashdot scolds, seem to be unable to grasp that Pravda in the name is a direct reference to the Russian newspaper that is literally a mouth of the state - Musk's Pravda is a pointed reference making a dig at modern "news" which has in effect become a mouthpiece of the Deep State, which as he says is layered in lies that wish to be promoted by the elite.

        There's a few other people who understand what this refers to, but alarmingly few otherwise intelligent Slashdot people seem to get the joke. The rot has gone deep indeed.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          What are the chances that this crowd sourced truth ends up promoting Brietbart and RT as the most trustworthy sources?

        • Oh, a lot of us are quite able to grasp that it's a direct reference to the USSR propaganda publication of the same name, whose name was incredibly ironic in practice.

          Names for projects tend to be prophetic, if nothing else because they say a lot about the expectations and opinions of the people who started it and will influence those who join in later. (This is a good reason to choose names with positive connotations, or use made-up words.) Naming something aiming to push for the news media to be more cr

        • ... you have to stop at just the right point to see it like this.

          "Pravda", a Russian newspaper named after the Russian word for truth, was used by the government to distribute their version of the truth.

          Now why should Elon Musks project, apparently ironically given the same name, not follow in the footsteps of its namesake?

          I have yet to see a "Fact Finder" or "Anti Fake News" project that is unbiased (if that is even possible), many of them are among the worst in terms of propagating biases.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:23PM (#56662152) Homepage

      It's a joke from Soviet Russia, though probably an obscure reference in 2018. They had two main newspapers, Pravda which means "Truth" and Izvestia which means "News". Pravda was the official voice of the communist party and Izvestia was the official voice of the soviet government. In English the joke would be "There is no truth in News, and there is no news in Truth." The current day newspapers are fairly unrelated.

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      I keep looking for Onion watermarks on the relevant tweets... then I remember what year it is. But yeah.. Musk seems to be getting a bit off. People idealize him because of his money and spending on sci-fi projects.. but the guy himself... not someone I would want to be in a room with.
    • He named his car co. Tesla after a super genius who eventually went completely insane and ended up in a relationship with a pigeon. Perhaps he's following a little too closely in Tesla's footsteps.
      • So, by your measure anyone who has a favorite pet whom they feel an emotional link with 'Is in a relationship with it'?
        There are a LOT of pet owners who would easily fit in to that basket, children who cry for days after loosing their first goldfish, lapdogs that are looked after like children.

        Of course you need to imply something bordering on bestiality, with some insanity thrown in, in those situations? Interesting.

        Or perhaps you just drink the koolaid of the US media a little too deeply - Edison spent a

        • I have the utmost respect for Tesla's brilliance. I also believe many of the inventions credited to Edison were created by Tesla when he worked for Edison as a patent clerk. That said, there is a mountain of evidence of Tesla's mental decline from numerous sources. As for the pigeon, here is the relationship in Tesla's own words.

          "I have been feeding pigeons, thousands of them for years. But there was one, a beautiful bird, pure white with light grey tips on its wings; that one was different. It was a fe
        • Or perhaps he has actually read Tesla's own words, which document the various issues Tesla had with mental health. Incidentally, if you check the timeline? Edison's smear campaign against Tesla definitely looks to have been a significant factor in Tesla's decline there.

    • I don't think that's lost on him. What I wonder is if he's interested in Truth or whether he's interested in Party Line. Picking the name he did I wonder what his intent is.

    • by TheSync ( 5291 )

      Grimes is blowing up Elon's brain. (That is probably a very enjoyable experience)

    • Read more about it here...

      https://www.pravda.ru/news/wor... [pravda.ru]

      or the google translated version for the comrades you can't speak russian here...

      https://translate.google.com/t... [google.com]

    • Pravda is not just Russian newspaper. It is chief propaganda newspaper of the Communist party since 1912, i.e. even before Russian revolution.

      So, Americans would hate this site, because it is something Russian, most Russians would hate it because it remind them of communists and Soviet times, and Russian communists hate Musk anyway, because he "stole" what they think biggest communist government achievement - human space flight technology.

  • Branding (Score:5, Informative)

    by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:27PM (#56662184) Journal

    WTF? Any body old enough to remember the USSR will see "Pravda" and immediately associate it with the USSR's mouthpiece. It's Russian for "truth", and was the butt of many jokes in the USA during the Soviet era. What's Elon thinking here?

    • by urusan ( 1755332 )

      Elon Musk seems like he's really good at messing with people in humorous ways. I mean, an eccentric billionaire's gotta have hobbies, right?

    • Surely he's making a deliberate reference, which he assumes or intends to be an ironic reference, which time will tell whether merely turns out to be prophetic.

    • WTF? Any body old enough to remember the USSR will see "Pravda" and immediately associate it with the USSR's mouthpiece. It's Russian for "truth", and was the butt of many jokes in the USA during the Soviet era. What's Elon thinking here?

      Yep. And he's going to get mountains of free press for it. It's "edgy".

    • What's Elon thinking here?

      That people would get the joke. Evidently he's wrong.

    • Pravda does not mean "truth" like truth means truth in English, although you can translate it like that... and it would be correct (literally), but it would be out of context if you thought about that word the same way you think about truth in English.

      Pravda also means justice, and Istina also means Truth. In some Slavic languages, Pravda only means Justice.

      "Every time the word "pravda" comes to my mind, I am exhilarated by its stunning beauty. Such a word is not, apparently, to be found in any [ot
  • by willoughby ( 1367773 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:32PM (#56662224)

    I saw Fahrenheit 9/11 in a theater (not my idea). I'd heard of this Moore guy but never seen any of his stuff. I guess I'm more of a critical thinker than most folks but I was struck by:

    Moore never makes any claims. He never stands flat-footed, looking into the camera and says, "I believe... and here's evidence of that". A clear claim can be refuted or disproven. If you make no clear, direct claims no-one can prove you wrong.

    His film was all supposition, innuendo, insinuation, interspersed with quick shots of Moore looking into the camera with a "Nudge, nudge, wink, wink, say no more..." expression.

    And people left the theater really believing More had made claims and then backed them up with evidence.

    So much of the "fake news" is written in s similar manner: " believes that...", "...is linked to..." (what does that one mean, anyway?), etc.

    But I blame Michael Moore for conditioning people to read this crap and really believe they have been given hard facts where there are none. And the press so often write like this now. I think the "news" writers today have grown up with this and don't even realize that's not how you're meant to cover the news.

    • by john of sparta ( 5260389 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:48PM (#56662324)
      Moore made ONE claim: Trump would win the election. quote: I am sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but I gave it to you straight last summer when I told you that Donald Trump would be the Republican nominee for president. And now I have even more awful, depressing news for you: Donald J. Trump is going to win in November. This wretched, ignorant, dangerous part-time clown and full time sociopath is going to be our next president. President Trump. Go ahead and say the words, ‘cause you’ll be saying them for the next four years: “PRESIDENT TRUMP. link: https://michaelmoore.com/trump... [michaelmoore.com]
    • by Gavagai80 ( 1275204 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:49PM (#56662328) Homepage

      The problem is confirmation bias. Michael Moore didn't convince anyone who didn't already agree with him, but he convinced idiots that their opponents had just been disproved. Today's fake news works the same way, it doesn't really fool anybody of a different ideology but it strengthens the partisan echo chamber so that fewer people ever step outside of it. Kind of like religious dogma in that the more absurd it is the more your faith is enhanced by believing and the less likely you are to question anything in the future.

      (For the record, I'm as liberal as non-communists come but could never stand Moore.)

    • "...is linked to..." (what does that one mean, anyway?)

      In scientific reporting it means that a correlation was found. It is often and easily misconstrued as a causal relation, either by the reporter or the reader.

      But I blame Michael Moore for conditioning people to read this crap and really believe they have been given hard facts where there are none

      If everybody does it, it can hardly be one man's fault.

      The simple problem is that the human psyche has certain weaknesses which are being exploited more and more effectively by more and more industries, usually for profit. Unless there is sufficient selection pressure towards what a for profit industry should deliver, it will inevitably evolve towards

    • Moore never makes any claims.

      Of course he did. A quick youtube to get help recall some info, in the first few minutes there are plenty of verifiable claims, here's a couple:
      1. The networks all called Florida for Gore. The first call for Bush came from Fox where the lead guy running the numbers at Fox was Bush's cousin.
      2. Florida 's governor was his brother
      3. Bush's head of campaign was also in charge of vote counting and was responsible for hiring a firm to 'clean' the voter rolls of mostly black voters
      4. Moore then highlights some

  • by bursch-X ( 458146 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @06:39PM (#56662272)
    Things that have the word 'truth' (Pravda is truth in Russian) in the title or name, usually have very little of it in its content or substance.
  • There seems to be no shortage of tech CEOs who have the emotional maturity level of 12-year-old boys.

    But we already knew that about Elon - it's been evident for a couple years [fastcompany.com]. He may be brilliant, but he's also a self-entitled whiny crybaby.

  • I've turned off local and regional "if it bleeds it leads" nonsense for decades. For my ($0) money, Reuters world news is about as relevant and impartial as it gets.

  • How can we be sure that his 'truth' site (that's what 'pravda' translates to) really is the truth, though?
  • by mveloso ( 325617 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @07:05PM (#56662416)

    There's no truth in the news and there's no news in the truth.

    It has a better ring in Russian, since the two leading organs were Pravda (truth) and Izvestia (news).

  • Hope they're not going to limit it to just journalists. How about having a rating for CEO's too?
  • Who rate the raters? And how will the system prevent rating down by raters that just dislike a news?
    • by mentil ( 1748130 )

      How about the truth score is moderated by awarded journalists and editors who are well-known for casting light on corruption, and wish to maintain that reputation? That's about as good as one could hope for. Of course, such an effort would be better created by, say, Reporters Without Borders, than a random billionaire.

  • by MitchRandall ( 2881947 ) on Wednesday May 23, 2018 @08:38PM (#56662828)
    Now God is real. Noah's Ark is real. The Red Sea parted. Alah is real. Mohamad rose to heaven on a white horse. Santa Clause is real. 13 Twitter trolls threw the election with some Bernie memes against Hillary's $2billion campaign. Assad did a gas attack to kill no one, but to cause the US to attack his country as he was winning. Modern gas pipelines don't leak. Trump is the reason why all of a sudden we're selling arms to Saudi Arabia again like Obama did. Trump has caused everything to go bad because it was perfect before. We don't have money for Bernie's plan for free college. The military needs a $700 billion increase without debate or attention. We can't afford cheaper, single-payer healthcare. Ranked Choice Voting hurts democracy. It would be a mistake to buy meds from Canada at half the price. Repealing Net Neutrality is common sense. Julian Assange is an enemy of the state for publishing their illegal activity. Edward Snowden is a traitor for exposing illegal NSA surveylance. All media agrees on this unanimously, so if any news source is out of line, we can make sure they are called out!
  • EU tried and failed. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Askmum ( 1038780 ) on Thursday May 24, 2018 @02:35AM (#56663792)
    Search for "EU vs Disinfo" for the EU backed try to do this. They failed woefully. Basically what is was was EU censorship "you do not follow the EU guidelines and propaganda so you are fake news". And then you're branded as being not credible as a journalist...
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by gotan ( 60103 ) on Thursday May 24, 2018 @06:27AM (#56664428) Homepage

    Teach people to seek a broader view by comparing different accounts, to keep in mind the source of a news story and its possible motivations and biases, to analyze texts for their true information content, presented facts, rhetorical devices and omissions, and most of all teach them to think for themselves.

    Also everyone should be aware, that our view of our world is incomplete and be ready to reevaluate and adapt our world view when new facts are presented.

    In the end the people will build their own opinions anyways, the best we can do is give them the tools to use reason in the process.

    • If I'm feeling charitable, I'd agree, but plenty of people scooted on through primary and secondary education without getting much out of it beyond a diploma.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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