Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/47696
Title: The Remediation of Fact-Checks on Social Media: Insights from a Multi-Platform Content Analysis
Authors: Hermans, Babette
WAETERLOOS, Cato 
Opgenhaffen, Michaël
Issue Date: 2025
Publisher: Springer
Source: Digital journalism, , p. 1 -19
Status: Early view
Abstract: The rise of social media has escalated the spread of misinformation, and the practice of fact-checking has become a key tool in the fight against it. Over time, the practice of fact-checking evolved and in recent years, fact-checking practices have shifted to social media platforms. However, social media’s unique logic requires fact-checkers to adapt—or “remediate” - their content to these platforms, which can prove to be challenging. Research is currently lacking on how fact-checks are remediated to this new format. This study examined how fact-checking organizations remediate their website fact-checks to different social media platforms, through an extensive content analysis (N = 14.891) of website and social media fact-checks published by eight fact-checking organizations (Belgium, the US, the UK). Results show that transfer rates from the website to social media are generally high, but that there are differences across organizations. Fact-checks are diffused to social media with an initial widespread burst across platforms but are often not re-shared after this. Reposting of content happens mostly within the platform, with reposts across platforms occurring less often. There is a prevalence of hard news topics both in website fact-checks as on social media, indicating no trend of news softening.
Keywords: Fact-checking;remediation;content analysis;website;social media;content adaptation
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/47696
ISSN: 2167-0811
e-ISSN: 2167-082X
DOI: 10.1080/21670811.2025.2580979
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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