2023 Fact-Checks in Review

In 2023, we have gathered almost 45.000 facts from the leading newsrooms and fact-checking organisations worldwide. Our newsletter highlights the most interesting ones every week, but let's take a moment to reflect on some of the critical topics that affected your news year.

Every day, fact-checkers worldwide verify the trending news. However, many struggle to get an overview of all the debunked information happening 24/7 . That is why we built the Factisearch database which is the basis of this article. Every hour you can find new articles in over 40 languages to help you get an overview - you can log in and see more here Factisearch.ai

top 20 words in fact-checks

Topic of the year: Covid-19

1000+ fact-checks

Covid-19 continued to be a major source of misinformation, although the frequency of related fact-checks has been declining. Claims were often about the vaccine, ranging from the ingredients, alleged side effects to ludicrous claims about its death rate and other conspiracy theories.

Ukraine

500 + fact-checks

The war in Ukraine has also had high interest throughout the year mostly on the state of the conflict and how countries are supporting Ukraine with weapons and money.

February: Turkey Earthquake

300+ fact-checks

More and more claims contain photos or videos, which are almost always mislabeled or taken out of context. The tragic earthquake in Turkey is an example of that. Misinformation also appeared about some people knowing about the earthquake beforehand or even causing it.

June: Titan Submersible

100+ fact-checks

Claims shifted from early reports of the crew's death to later claims that they had faked their deaths.

July: Barbenheimer

At least in terms of fact-checks "Barbie" was more popular than "Oppenheimer" (more than 30 claims vs less than 10).

August: Chandrayaan Spacecraft

100+ fact-checks

Indias successful mission to the moon was followed by the obligatory claims about aliens being found.

October: Israel-Hamas Conflict

1000+ fact-checks

An endless flood of mislabeled photos and videos made it difficult for everyone to know what is going on in this devastating war. Claims speculated on who is involved, which targets were bombed by which side, protests to support one side or the other, or even if the whole thing was staged.

73% of claims were false, only 3% were true

Most of the fact-checked statements in 2023 turned out to be false, showing the importance of fact-checking yet again, especially in time-critical situations where new information can appear minute by minute. By the time a manual fact-check can debunk a claim, there are already hundreds more. 2024, we will continue to gather and highlight the work of the newsrooms on sorting facts from fiction. It is especially problematic with the advancements in AI tools that enable many to use AI for malicious efforts and more misinformation.

To follow the daily news from fact-checking organisations in one place - check out Factisearch.AI and our APIs.

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