The New York Times - Your Monday Briefing

Facebook spreads misinformation in India.
Author Headshot

By Amelia Nierenberg

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering Facebook’s problems in India, New Zealand’s vaccination outreach and the Taliban’s suicide bomber propaganda.

Illustration by Mel Haasch; Photographs by Rebecca Conway for The New York Times, Manjunath Kiran/AFP -- Getty Images

India’s Facebook problem

Facebook’s struggle with misinformation, hate speech and celebrations of violence is at a fever pitch in India, its biggest market, according to internal documents.

Misinformation bloomed during the pandemic. Bots and fake accounts tied to the country’s ruling party and opposition figures wreaked havoc on national elections. Anti-Muslim posts also proliferated.

In one instance, a Facebook researcher created a new account to test the experience of a user in the state of Kerala, and then directed the account to follow all the recommendations generated by Facebook’s algorithms. “Following this test user’s News Feed, I’ve seen more images of dead people in the past three weeks than I’ve seen in my entire life total,” the researcher wrote in an internal report.

Resources: Only 10 percent of Facebook’s daily active users are in North America. But the company earmarked 87 percent of its global budget for classifying misinformation for the U.S., according to one document.

Data: In a report produced after the elections, Facebook found that over 40 percent of top impressions in the Indian state of West Bengal were “fake/inauthentic.”

Response: Human rights activists and politicians have long accused Facebook of moving into countries without fully understanding its potential impact. In India, a lack of expertise in the nation’s 22 officially recognized languages hampered the company.

People waiting to receive coronavirus vaccines in Auckland, New Zealand, earlier this month.Phil Walter/Getty Images

New Zealand’s vaccination strategy

The country is trying to vaccinate 90 percent of its eligible population before reopening, and so far, 86 percent of people 12 and older have received at least one dose.

But the final few percent are the most difficult to reach. One group of concern is the gang community. Many of their members are Maori or Pacific Islanders, who make up about a quarter of the overall population. Just over 47 percent of eligible Maori are fully vaccinated, compared with nearly 70 percent of the wider population.

In the past two months, after multiple outbreaks spread among gangs, officials and gang leaders began working together. Now, health professionals are working alongside gang members to help with vaccination outreach and contact tracing.

Context: New Zealand has one of the highest rates of gang membership in the world: At least 8,000 people are members. Although some are part of the drug trade, gangs have a long history and often provide critical social structures for Maori in urban centers.

Here are the latest updates and maps of the pandemic.

In other developments:

  • Hospitalizations are rising again in Britain, testing the country’s plan to remain open with virtually no restrictions.
Victims of a suicide attack at the Kabul airport arrived at an emergency hospital in August.Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

The Taliban’s propaganda push

The Taliban brought together families of suicide bombers at a publicized event at the Intercontinental Hotel in Kabul last week. Officials praised their actions in the fight against the U.S.-backed coalition and Afghan government. In an effort to appease the aggrieved families, the officials also gave them condolence payments and a promise of land.

The decision seemed to be an effort to rewrite the history of the war and professionalize the role of suicide bomber. It also raised questions of how the Taliban will remember soldiers killed and wounded in the previous government’s military, and how — or if — their family members will be compensated.

Background: Experts believe the Taliban started using suicide attacks in 2001. By the end of the war, the attacks had evolved into an integral military tactic. Those who carried them out wore slick uniforms and were championed as elite in certain units.

Displacement: Dozens of Afghan refugees, red-flagged by the U.S. as potentially dangerous, remain in limbo on a military base in Kosovo. And thousands of Afghans, who were in India to receive medical treatment when the Taliban took power, are struggling to return home.

THE LATEST NEWS

Asia
“Standing Female Deity,” one of the 45 artifacts that Cambodian officials say are in the Met’s collection.Metropolitan Museum of Art
China
  • China Evergrande, the debt-riddled property giant, paid bondholders on Friday before a default deadline, an official newspaper reported.
  • State media reported on Thursday that Li Yundi, a famous pianist, was detained on suspicion of soliciting a prostitute, a charge officials often use against political enemies.
  • The Hong Kong Journalists Association is fighting to stay afloat, even as unions and other organizations have dissolved under a new security law.
The Middle East
  • Israel accused six Palestinian rights groups of terrorism, a move critics say was designed to deflect scrutiny.
  • Turkish opposition parties are organizing to replace President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, end the powerful presidency and return the country to a parliamentary system.
  • Erdogan also threatened to expel 10 ambassadors from Western countries after they demanded the release of a jailed philanthropist.
Sports
Pakistan’s captain Babar Azam yesterday at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium.Aamir Qureshi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
What Else Is Happening
Alec Baldwin outside the Santa Fe County sheriff’s office on Thursday.Jim Weber/Santa Fe New Mexican, via Associated Press
A Morning Read
A fisherman feeding whale sharks near the town of Tan-Awan.Hannah Reyes Morales for The New York Times

The chance to swim with whale sharks led to a tourism boom in a small fishing town in the Philippines. But conservation groups say hand feeding, which keeps the gentle (and endangered) giants around, is interrupting their migratory patterns.

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ARTS AND IDEAS

China’s interstellar gender barriers

Col Wang Yaping and her colleagues during a ceremony near Jiuquan, China, earlier this month.Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters

In the coming weeks, Col. Wang Yaping will be the first Chinese woman to walk in space. But she faces an undercurrent of sexism on the ground.

As the 41-year-old space veteran began her six-month mission last week, the media questioned her about the daughter she left behind. Officials, who have treated her mission as a novelty, made it known that they had supplied the space station with sanitary napkins and makeup.

The discourse is the latest example of the sexism that courses through Chinese society. Women trying to enter male-dominated occupations like civil aviation are struggling to get into the necessary academic programs. When they do break barriers, their accomplishments are often viewed through the prism of gender.

“A major power like China gives women the chance to go to space,” said the activist Lu Pin. “On the other hand, it still tells everyone that, even if you are a woman who has become an astronaut, you still have to play a traditional female role.”

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Sang An for The New York Times

These stir-fried brussels sprouts mimic the smoky taste of wok hei.

What to Watch

Our critic called “Dune,” the sci-fi epic based on the 1965 novel by Frank Herbert, “a serious, stately opus.”

What to Read

The Times Book Review celebrated its 125th anniversary. Check out this recent review of “The Woman Warrior,” a 1976 memoir from Maxine Hong Kingston that evokes her Chinese immigrant family and summons the ghosts who haunt it.

Now Time to Play

That’s it for today’s briefing. See you next time. — Amelia

P.S. Christine Chung, Amanda Holpuch and Vimal Patel are joining The Times’s Express desk as reporters.

The latest episode of “The Daily” is on Muammar el-Qaddafi’s son.

You can reach Amelia and the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

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