>Good morning.
>Thursday morning.
Mornin, frenz
check out this horseshit
Wayback Machine using Racist Google for muh fact checks. Links to Alex Demas at the Dispatch
"Context related to this Web page from The Dispatch Fact Check can be found here. Context matching provided by the Google Fact Check Markup Tool, licensed under CC BY."
About Alex Demas
Alex Demas is a fact checker at The Dispatch and is based in Washington, D.C. Prior to joining the company in 2023, he worked in England as a financial journalist and earned his MA in Political Economy at King's College London. When not heroically combating misinformation online, Alex can be found mixing cocktails, watching his beloved soccer team Aston Villa lose a match, or attempting to pet stray cats.
>Wayback Machine using Racist Google for muh fact checks
>Context matching provided by the GoogleFact Check Markup Tool, licensed under CC BY."
https://developers.google.com/search/docs/appearance/structured-data/factcheck
Fact check (ClaimReview) structured data
If you have a web page that reviews a claim made by others, you can include ClaimReview structured data on your web page. ClaimReview structured data can enable a summarized version of your fact check to display in Google Search results when your page appears in search results for that claim.
This guide describes the details on how to implement ClaimReview structured data. If you don't want to add structured data manually, you can check out the Fact Check Markup Tool. To learn more, visit About the Fact Check Markup Tool.
Reconcile Bradley's tone in the texts vs Bradley's demeanor on the witness stand and reluctance to answer any questions.
While Nathan Wade was sitting with the lawyers
>BREAKING: 400+ texts filed with Fulton County court in the D.A. Fani Willis misconduct case include witness Terrence Bradley discussing the need to subpoena Willis' grown daughters Nia and Kinaya to testify that Willis began affair with anti-Trump prosecutor before she hired him
>HAPPY HUNTING
PB below
>>20493224, >>20493229, >>20493242, >>20493248, >>20493256, >>20493260, >>20493269 400+ new texts filed w/Fulton County court in D.A. Fani Willis misconduct case
>>20493360 ‘Happy Hunting LOL’: Megyn Reveals ALL the Lawyer-Witness Texts About the Fani Willis-Nathan Wade Affair
>good morning Ralph.
>G'Mornin' Anons… Another Day at the Office.
o7
>What is your problem with Anons saying Good Morning to other Anons?
>None, to my knowledge are spammers or promoting anything, and some appreciate the fact that there are other Anons here everyday and helps to remind us that we are not in this fight alone.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>proper fucked. Winnipeg lab. Wuhan.
>check out this horseshit
>>Wayback Machine using Racist Google for muh fact checks
>>Context matching provided by the GoogleFact Check Markup Tool, licensed under CC BY."
These global projects expand the reach of fact-checks
Mar 16, 2021
·2 min read
Alexios Mantzarlis.jpg
Alexios Mantzarlis
News and Information Credibility Lead, Google News Lab
Share
All over the world, a massive immunization effort is underway.
The rapid nature of the COVID-19 vaccine development process and the great anxiety caused by the pandemic have made the topic of vaccination particularly susceptible to misinformation. Journalists can play a fundamental role supporting an evidence-based discourse by listening to their audiences’ concerns and providing corrective information about misconceptions that circulate online and offline.
To support this work, the Google News Initiative launched a $3 million Open Fund in January. Over a three-week window, we received more than 309 applications from 74 countries.
Today, we are announcing the 11 projects that were selected through an extensive review process that included a 17-person project team and an expert jury reviewing the highest-scoring applicants.
These projects stood out for their attempt to reach underrepresented audiences, explore new formats for fact checks and rigorous strategies to measure their impact. Each recipient will be sharing more details on their own channels in the upcoming weeks. Here’s a brief overview of the projects:
Africa Check, in partnership with Theatre for a Change, will produce a series of interactive radio drama shows in Wolof in Senegal and Pidgin in Nigeria to present fact checks in a more participatory format.
Agência Lupa will provide COVID-19 vaccine fact checks to a network of community radios covering Brazilian “news deserts” and work with digital influencers to promote media literacy on the topic.
Aleteia, I.Media and Verificat.cat will work with a scientific committee and two research centers to source misinformation and create a database of related fact checks available in seven languages for Catholic media outlets around the world.
Chequeado will continue spearheading the collaborative project Latam Chequea that includes more than 20 fact-checking organizations across Latin America. It will aim to reach senior citizens, indigenous populations and 18-to-26-year-olds through dedicated formats.
The hyperlocal digital site Escenario Tlaxcala, assisted by local doctors, will produce fact-checking content and distribute it across the Mexican state in Nahuatl and Otomí through various formats including by using “perifoneo” loudspeakers to reach offline audiences.
Katadata will provide a platform debunking COVID-19 vaccine misinformation and work with the Indonesia Traditional Wet Market Merchants Association (Asparindo) to disseminate this content to wet markets across the country.
In Uruguay, la diaria will publish fact checks and co-created content around COVID-19 misinformation, broadening its reach by partnering with trap music performer Pekeño 77 and screenwriter Pedro Saborido.
Servimedia and Maldita.es will join force to create fact-checking content relevant for Spaniards with disabilities, in formats that are accessible to them.
Stuff will work in partnership with Māori Television and the Pacific Media Network to fact-check misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine in New Zealand.
A broad collaborative project led by The Quint in India will seek to source hyper-local misinformation and distribute fact checks through a grassroots network of rural women.
Univision Noticias and FactCheck.org will work together to produce fact checks about COVID-19 immunization as short bilingual video explainers, with a plan to measure their impact systemically and reach a majority of U.S. Hispanic households.
Our goal is for the lessons learned from these initiatives to support our collective understanding of how best to combat misinformation about health topics, whether it’s through new audience strategies or new approaches to measuring the impact of fact checks. Stay tuned for more updates from us as these projects get underway.
https://archive.ph/wsnBX
>These global projects expand the reach of fact-checks
>Mar 16, 2021
>·2 min read
>Alexios Mantzarlis.jpg
>Alexios Mantzarlis
https://www.mantzarlis.com/
Alexios Mantzarlis
Hi! I've spent the past decade working on the challenge of online misinformation and content moderation.
I am currentlya principal on the Google Trust & Safety Intelligence team, focusing on misinformation__ and generative AI__.I was previously a manager on the product policy team for Google Search, which is responsible for writing content policies for the search engine. Among other things, I led Search product policy's response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
I first joined Google in August 2019 as the News and Information Credibility Lead. In that role, I led efforts to highlight fact checks to users in product (1, 2, 3), and share information on their reach. I was also responsible for initiatives supporting the fact-checking ecosystem’s response to the COVID-19 infodemic (1, 2). My blog post with tips to spot misinformation was featured on the Google homepage globally for International Fact-Checking Day in 2021.
From February to July 2019 I was a TED fellow researching whether the public can be meaningfully included in decision-making about information quality on the major platforms.
From September 2015 to February 2019, I was the founding director of the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN), the global coalition of fact-checking projects. In 2022, the Former Minister of Culture and Equality of Norway Trine Skei Grande nominated the IFCN for the Nobel Peace prize.
As Director of the IFCN, I helped draft the fact-checkers' code of principles, shepherded a seminal partnership between fact-checkers and Facebook, testified to the Italian Chamber of Deputies on the "fake news" phenomenon and helped launch International Fact-Checking Day. I also organized the annual Global Fact-Checking Summit, the premier conference on the topic.
I previously served as Managing Editor of Pagella Politica, Italy's main political fact-checking website. While at Pagella Politica, I got to present weekly fact-checking segments on Virus, a prime time talk show airing on the national broadcaster RAI 2.
My expertise has been recognized by several international institutions. In 2018 I was invited to join the European Union's High Level Group on fake news and online disinformation and to draft a lesson plan for UNESCO.
My publications include a chapter on fact-checking in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections in Truth Counts, a study on Zika and fake news published by the American Journal of Health Education, and another study on the mission and priorities of fact-checking sites published by Political Quarterly.
I've been quoted extensively on media outlets around the world including Al Jazeera, The Atlantic, BBC, Folha de S. Paulo, Le Monde, NPR and The Washington Post.
Before becoming a fact-checker, I worked for the United Nations and the Italian Institute for International Political Studies.
>Alexios Mantzarlis
>check out this horseshit
>>Wayback Machine using Racist Google for muh fact checks
>>Context matching provided by the GoogleFact Check Markup Tool, licensed under CC BY."
>These global projects expand the reach of fact-checks
>Mar 16, 2021
>Alexios Mantzarlis. a principal on the Google Trust & Safety Intelligence team, focusing on misinformation and generative AI.
What is the COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund?
The uncertainty and developing nature of the health crisis provoked by the novel coronavirus has made providing accurate, evidence-based journalism more essential than ever.
The COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund is aimed at supporting journalistic efforts to fact-check misinformation about the COVID-19 immunization process that specifically seek to support audiences that are underserved by fact-checking or targeted by misinformation.
The Fund will make up to USD $3,000,000 available for projects which demonstrate a clear potential to provide effective corrective tools and content to counterbalance COVID-19 vaccine misinformation. Google will fund selected projects up to USD $1,000,000 each, covering up to 80% of the total overall budget of the project. Applicants cannot ask for an amount higher than 50% of their annual total income (Please note, this should reflect the combined annual income of partners for collaborative projects and include revenue generated as well as donations, philanthropy support etc).
Priority will be given to collaborative projects (e.g. multiple news organizations / entities working together) and that are interdisciplinary in nature (e.g. involve journalists working alongside epidemiologists or immunologists).
Important Notice: The COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund provides funding to journalistic efforts, and is not intended to support creation of medical or health related information. If an applicant creates medical or health related information (including information about misinformation) through projects funded by the COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund, that information is the sole responsibility of the applicant and its team, and Google will not be responsible for that information.
https://web.archive.org/web/20210125002626/https://newsinitiative.withgoogle.com/covid-vaccine-counter-misinfo-fund/how-to-apply/#governance
>The COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund is aimed at supporting journalistic efforts to fact-check misinformation about the COVID-19 immunization process that specifically seek to support audiences that are underserved by fact-checking or targeted by misinformation.
>The Fund will make up to USD $3,000,000 available for projects
Application Process
The application window opens on January 12th, 2021 at 6:00 PT and closes on January 31, 2021 at 23:59 PT. You will be asked to provide descriptions, detailed project plans and budget information via our online application form. You will also have to accept the Terms and Conditions.
Application Eligibility Requirements
The COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund is open to news organizations of every size, both for profit and nonprofit, publishing on any medium (digital, print, video, etc) that aim to produce original journalistic content. Applicants can be individual organizations or coalitions of publishers, both formal and informal.
All applicants should have a proven track record in fact-checking and debunking activities or partner with an organisation with such recognition. Evidence that third parties recognize the organization as a fact-checker will be required in the application, with membership of the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) being the most prominent.
Projects must be ready to launch as soon as possible andno later than April 15, 2021.They should be fully realized within 12 months of obtaining the funding.
Eligible Regions
Applicants must be incorporated in one of the eligible countries listed below.
Eligible Geographies are (in alphabetical order):
Asia Pacific
Australia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, Cook Islands, East Timor, Easter Island, Fiji, Hong Kong SAR, India, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Macau SAR, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Samoa, Singapore, Solomon Islands, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, Vietnam
Europe
Albania, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Montenegro, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom
Middle East and Africa
Algeria, Angola, Bahrain, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Congo (Brazzaville), Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Iraq, Israel, Ivory Coast, Jordan, KSA, Kenya, Kuwait, Lesotho, Libya, Lebanon, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Palestine, Oman, Qatar, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, South Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda, UAE, Western Sahara, Zambia, Zimbabwe
North America
Canada, United States, United States Overseas Territories
Latin America and the Caribbean
Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, The Bahamas, Barbados, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, Uruguay
Project Funding
Google will fund up to $1,000,000 per selected project. Special discretion on the total project cap may be considered by the jury depending on the scale and impact of a very large collaborative application. Google will finance up to 80% of the overall costs of the selected projects. Organizations are expected to detail costs for their projects, which can include in-kind expenditure (for example, people assigned to the project). Eligible expenses include engineering and operations costs (e.g. product development, project management, user experience design, database build and maintenance, and hosting), the purchase or licensing of any equipment, tools, hardware, software and other assets or materials needed for the project and marketing expenses (capped to 20% of the total amount requested). Funding may not be spent on general and overhead costs. Please note that the effective date for the project will be the date that the funding agreement is signed. No expenses incurred before this date can be covered by the funding.
Governance
Applications to the COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund are reviewed by a combination of the Google Project Team and the Jury. The Project Team will review all applications and interview applicants and then make a recommendation on funding projects. The Project Team is composed of Google employees working on News product, partnerships, UXR as well as public policy, research and trust & safety. These include:
Alexios Mantzarlis, Ashley Edwards, Clement Wolf, David Sklar, Harris Cohen, Irene Jay Liu, Isabelle Sonnenfeld, Lisa Lehman, Sarah Hartley, Simon Baumgartner, Sven Naumann, Vincent Ryan
The Jury will select the Open Fund winners and is composed by the following individuals:
Alexios Mantzarlis,News and Information Credibility Lead, Google News Lab
Alexios works on product and partnership efforts to counter misinformation, particularly around fact-checking and news credibility signals. He has led efforts to highlight fact checks to users in product, share information on their reach and support the fact-checking ecosystem’s response to the COVID-19 infodemic. Prior to joining Google, Alexios served as the founding director of the International Fact-Checking Network, where he helped draft the fact-checkers' code of principles and shepherd a seminal partnership between fact-checkers and Facebook. His work has been published on the American Journal of Health Education and Political Quarterly.
Amy Pisani, Executive Director, Vaccinate Your Family
Amy Pisani is a leading authority in vaccine advocacy. As the long-time executive director of the nonprofit organization Vaccinate Your Family, Pisani is a leader in building alliances with like-minded interests, working with the media to ensure science-based reporting on vaccines, and educating the public in person and online. With a total of 200,000+ followers across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube, VYF has a substantial social media presence, reaching over 3.2 million people annually with science-based information about the importance of timely vaccinations and the safety of vaccines for people of all ages.
>The Jury will select the Open Fund winners and is composed by the following individuals:
Bitch is everywhere
Project Funding
Google will fund up to $1,000,000 per selected project. Special discretion on the total project cap may be considered by the jury depending on the scale and impact of a very large collaborative application. Google will finance up to 80% of the overall costs of the selected projects. Organizations are expected to detail costs for their projects, which can include in-kind expenditure (for example, people assigned to the project). Eligible expenses include engineering and operations costs (e.g. product development, project management, user experience design, database build and maintenance, and hosting), the purchase or licensing of any equipment, tools, hardware, software and other assets or materials needed for the project and marketing expenses (capped to 20% of the total amount requested). Funding may not be spent on general and overhead costs. Please note that the effective date for the project will be the date that the funding agreement is signed. No expenses incurred before this date can be covered by the funding.
Governance
Applications to the COVID-19 Vaccine Counter-Misinformation Open Fund are reviewed by a combination of the Google Project Team and the Jury. The Project Team will review all applications and interview applicants and then make a recommendation on funding projects. The Project Team is composed of Google employees working on News product, partnerships, UXR as well as public policy, research and trust & safety. These include:
Alexios Mantzarlis, Ashley Edwards, Clement Wolf, David Sklar, Harris Cohen, Irene Jay Liu, Isabelle Sonnenfeld, Lisa Lehman, Sarah Hartley, Simon Baumgartner, Sven Naumann, Vincent Ryan
The Jury will select the Open Fund winners and is composed by the following individuals:
Alexios Mantzarlis,News and Information Credibility Lead, Google News Lab
Alexios works on product and partnership efforts to counter misinformation, particularly around fact-checking and news credibility signals. He has led efforts to highlight fact checks to users in product, share information on their reach and support the fact-checking ecosystem’s response to the COVID-19 infodemic. Prior to joining Google, Alexios served as the founding director of the International Fact-Checking Network, where he helped draft the fact-checkers' code of principles and shepherd a seminal partnership between fact-checkers and Facebook. His work has been published on the American Journal of Health Education and Political Quarterly.
Amy Pisani, Executive Director, Vaccinate Your Family
Amy Pisani is a leading authority in vaccine advocacy. As the long-time executive director of the nonprofit organization Vaccinate Your Family, Pisani is a leader in building alliances with like-minded interests, working with the media to ensure science-based reporting on vaccines, and educating the public in person and online. With a total of 200,000+ followers across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube, VYF has a substantial social media presence, reaching over 3.2 million people annually with science-based information about the importance of timely vaccinations and the safety of vaccines for people of all ages.
>Bitch is everywhere
Angela Pimenta, Director of operations, Projor
Angela Pimenta is a co-coordinator of the Brazilian chapter of the Trust Project. She holds a Masters in Journalism from Columbia University and is a candidate at the Media and Technology PhD program of São Paulo State University (Unesp). Her doctoral research investigates media literacy strategies for the out-of-school Brazilian population.
Andy Pattison, Team Lead, Digital Channels,World Health Organization
Over the last 25 years, Andy has held a range of leadership roles in the digital space, supporting innovation across both private and public sectors. At WHO, Andy strives to amplify vital public health messages to more people through more channels. During the COVID-19 emergency, Andy has engaged the digital sector to support this mission and leads the Tech Task Force, a conglomerate of over 50 companies working to tackle misinformation, raise quality content and develop new digital channels. Through his work, WHO has been able to reach billions of people. Andy has also been the web lead for over 35 emergencies while at WHO, with deployments to the African Region to support both Ebola and Cholera outbreaks.
Baybars Örsek, Director, International Fact-Checking Network
Baybars Örsek is the director of the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) at The Poynter Institute, the premier global coalition of fact-checking organizations. Prior to joining IFCN, Örsek had served as the founding executive director of the Turkish fact-checking organization Doğruluk Payı between 2014 and 2019. He is a frequent expert source for major media outlets around the world. Örsek is a member of the board of trustees at TESEV, Turkey’s oldest think tank. Before launching Doğruluk Payı in 2014, he worked at his alma mater Istanbul Bilgi University. Örsek holds a B.A. degree in international relations and an M.A. degree in conflict resolution.
Gagandeep Kang, Professor of Microbiology, Christian Medical College (CMC) in Vellore
Gagandeep Kang is the first woman from India to be elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. She received her training in medicine and microbiology at the Christian Medical College, Vellore and post-doctoral training in the UK and US before returning to India to continue her work on enteric infections in children. With Indian and global collaborators, she has worked on the development and use of vaccines for rotaviruses, cholera and typhoid, conducting large studies to define burden, test vaccines and measure their impact.
Ifeoma Ozoma, Founder and Principal, Earthseed
Ifeoma Ozoma is the Founder and Principal of Earthseed. She is a tech policy expert with experience leading global public policy partnerships, public policy related content safety development, and US Federal, State, and International policymaker engagement at Pinterest, Facebook, and Google. Ifeoma’s health misinformation initiatives have been lauded by the World Health Organization, the Washington Post’s Editorial Board, and the New York Times. Ifeoma is also on the First Draft Inc, Board of Directors, a member of the Brookings Institution’s Transatlantic Working Group on Disinformation, and a member of The Washington Post's Technology 202 Network.
Ludovic Blecher, Head, Google News Initiative Innovation
Before joining Google, Ludovic Blecher was the director of the FINP: a digital press fund for French publishers backed by Google. During his first 3 years at Google he led our effort to stimulate the european news-ecosystem as the Head of the Digital News Innovation Fund. Ludovic is a journalist who has spent the past 15 years working in news. His career began as a reporter at Liberation, rising to Editor in Chief then Chief digital officer. He's a 2012 fellow at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard, and was a member of the French Digital Council independent advisory commission for the French Government.
Renee DiResta, Technical Research Manager, Stanford Internet Observer
Renée DiResta is the Technical Research Manager at the Stanford Internet Observatory, a cross-disciplinary program of research, teaching and policy engagement for the study of abuse in current information technologies. Renee investigates the spread of malign narratives and propaganda across social and media networks. Her work examines the ways in which different actors leverage the information ecosystem to exert influence, from domestic activists promoting health misinformation and conspiracy theories, to well-resourced full-spectrum information operations executed by state-sponsored actors.
>>The Jury will select the Open Fund winners and is composed by the following individuals:
Susannah Eliott, CEO, Australian Science Media Centre
Susannah Eliott has a PhD in cell biology, a postgraduate diploma in journalism and an honorary doctorate in science communication. She has worked at the coal face between science and the media in Australia and internationally for more than 25 years. She currently leads the Australian Science Media Centre, a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to promoting evidence in media reporting.
Syed Nazakat, Founder & CEO, Data Leads
Syed Nazakat is an award-winning Indian journalist, media entrepreneur, founder of DataLEADS. He leads DataLEADS in New Delhi, as well as oversees its outreach across Asia with different partners. He has worked in senior positions at different media organisations, reported from over 30 countries and his work has earned him global recognition and awards. Also as a Program Director, he leads the GNI India Training Network which is a fact-checking training effort for journalists and newsrooms that resulted in the launch of many fact-checking initiatives in India, in multiple languages. He is also founder of Health Analytics Asia and First Check –- two dedicated health reporting and fact-checking journalism platforms.
Theresa Amobi, Senior Lecturer, University of Lagos
Dr. Theresa Ifeoma Amobi is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of Mass Communication, University of Lagos, Nigeria. She teaches Multimedia and Online Journalism, Health Communication, Broadcasting and Film, International Communication, Social Science Research and Theories of Communication. Her research interests include Health Mis/Disinformation and Conspiracy theories, Media and Gender, Nollywood Film Industry, among others. She is a member of the Advisory Board of Africa Check, Fullfact and Chequeado; an Independent Researcher for Africa Check and other international agencies; and has been a member of the African Movies Academy Awards AMAA College of Screeners since 2014.
Yamil Velez, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Columbia University
Yamil Velez is a political scientist at Columbia University. His work focuses on how demographic change is shaping American politics. He is currently working on several projects related to Latino media, identity, and political attitudes. His research has been published in leading journals such as the Journal of Politics, American Journal of Political Science, and Political Behavior.
Brian Yau, Promotion & Engagement Lead,Vaccine Safety Net at WHO
Brian is an infodemic manager and creative design thinker with a background in product design engineering. He joined the Vaccine Safety Net (VSN) to develop partnerships, seek external collaborators, and explore digital innovations to further vaccine safety communication online. Established by the World Health Organization, the VSN is a network of 94 organizations, promoting reliable sources of information on vaccine safety.