Tech companies support DoH鈥檚 campaign to fight vaccine misinformation

Tech companies committed to supporting , a campaign launched today by the Department of Health (DoH) emphasizing the importance of accurate coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) information.聽
Facebook, Google, TikTok, and Twitter will raise awareness for the initiative, which includes a page on the DoH website that provides reliable information on the virus and its vaccines.聽
Filipinos spend an average of , according to the Digital 2021 report by Hootsuite and We Are Social. Online networks have become major sources of news for the country鈥檚, which makes fighting online misinformation crucial.
鈥淲e will continue working closely with global and national health authorities, including the Philippine Department of Health, to make it easy for people to find authoritative COVID-19 and vaccine information across Facebook鈥檚 apps,鈥 said Clare Amador, head of public policy of Facebook Philippines, in a press statement.聽聽
鈥淲e are also taking action against accounts that break our COVID-19 and vaccine rules鈥攊ncluding reducing their distribution or removing them from our platform,鈥 Ms. Amador added.
Google, for its part, has been taking down harmful and misleading content across its products, raising authoritative information on Search and YouTube, providing ad grants, and supporting quality news vaccine reporting. More than 700,000 videos worldwide related to dangerous or false COVID-19 information have been removed.
鈥淥ur information panels on YouTube have been viewed 400 billion times, making them a valuable source of credible information,鈥 said Google Philippines country director Bernadette Nacario in a press statement.聽
TikTok and Twitter have similar initiatives in their respective platforms. TikTok, according to Kristoffer Rada, TikTok Philippines鈥檚 head for public policy, collaborates with fact-checking partners and removes misinformation that violates community guidelines. 鈥淲e take the responsibility of helping counter inauthentic, misleading or false information,鈥 he said.聽
Twitter, meanwhile, implemented new policies to apply labels to the tweets that may contain misleading information surrounding COVID-19, in addition to its continued efforts to remove the same, according to Monrawee Ampolpittayanant, Twitter Southeast Asia鈥檚 head of public policy, government, and philanthropy.
鈥淲e believe that giving access to factual information is integral in building public confidence on vaccines, as well as keeping the integrity of public conversations around health,鈥 she said. 鈥 P. B. Mirasol


