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Credible, Unreliable or Leaked?: Evidence Verification for Enhanced Automated Fact-checking

Chrysidis, Zacharias, Papadopoulos, Stefanos-Iordanis, Papadopoulos, Symeon, Petrantonakis, Panagiotis C.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Automated fact-checking (AFC) is garnering increasing attention by researchers aiming to help fact-checkers combat the increasing spread of misinformation online. While many existing AFC methods incorporate external information from the Web to help examine the veracity of claims, they often overlook the importance of verifying the source and quality of collected "evidence". One overlooked challenge involves the reliance on "leaked evidence", information gathered directly from fact-checking websites and used to train AFC systems, resulting in an unrealistic setting for early misinformation detection. Similarly, the inclusion of information from unreliable sources can undermine the effectiveness of AFC systems. To address these challenges, we present a comprehensive approach to evidence verification and filtering. We create the "CREDible, Unreliable or LEaked" (CREDULE) dataset, which consists of 91,632 articles classified as Credible, Unreliable and Fact checked (Leaked). Additionally, we introduce the EVidence VERification Network (EVVER-Net), trained on CREDULE to detect leaked and unreliable evidence in both short and long texts. EVVER-Net can be used to filter evidence collected from the Web, thus enhancing the robustness of end-to-end AFC systems. We experiment with various language models and show that EVVER-Net can demonstrate impressive performance of up to 91.5% and 94.4% accuracy, while leveraging domain credibility scores along with short or long texts, respectively. Finally, we assess the evidence provided by widely-used fact-checking datasets including LIAR-PLUS, MOCHEG, FACTIFY, NewsCLIPpings+ and VERITE, some of which exhibit concerning rates of leaked and unreliable evidence.


Feds: Excuse for Computer Wipe in Kickback Case Not Credible

U.S. News

Brooks asked government attorneys on Thursday if they found it credible that FBI special agent Robert Cessario wiped the computer because he had also used it to download personal medical records he wanted to keep private. But Assistant U.S. Attorney Aaron Jennen said he doesn't believe that explanation.