Local Chapter Nepal Chapter
Coordinated by Nepal ,
Status: Completed
Project Duration: 16 Jan 2023 - 01 May 2023
With 91% of Nepali Population having access to the internet and 65 % users on mobile internet users, digital media and social networks are key for spread of information. The ability to follow a group, share information, react, comment and re-share any post have made a common person a social media star in a matter of days. Also the same media can damage someone’s reputation, build distrust towards media, politics, established institutions and governments very quickly. In fact, Fake news spreads like wildfire faster and farther than true stories, and humans are primarily responsible for the spread of misleading information.
More so, during local and general elections in Nepal, we came across a flood of potentially false claims in the media, many of which we assume to be true. There are many cases we can see where political parties misuse social media platforms during elections to advance their populist agendas.
Not everything that one sees on the internet can be believed, yet when we are browsing, we generally don’t seek the source of the information.
There are different Types of Misinformation:
– ClickBait.
– Propaganda.
– Sponsored contents.
– Satire and hoax.
– Misinformation.
– False news.
– Disinformation.
– Rumours.
– DeepFakes and Manipulated photos and video.
– Posts designed to type RIP and comment to get viral.
Different types of problems require different types of solutions.
Week 1
Data Collection
Week 2
Data Pre-Prcessing
Week 3
Exploratory Data Analysis
Week 4
Modelling
Week 5
Testing Model
Week 6
Building API
Week 7
Building Front-end
Week 8
Deployment
– Data Collection: Source and scrape news and post on fake information.
– Data Cleaning.
– Data Analysis.
– Building Machine Learning Models.
– Developing an API.
– Building and hosting the platform.