Combating Fake News with Artificial Intelligence and Arc

factmata arc freelance developer success story case study
Summary:

Learn how London-based startup Factmata built a fact-checking tool to combat fake news with the help of Arc software developers.

Factmata Company Profile:

Location: London
Investors: Google, Mark Cuban, Mark Pincus, Sunil Paul
Tech Stack: React, Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing

In an age of fake news and misinformation, Factmata, a London-based startup, is on a mission to bring facts back to the general public.

With more than 20 years of research experience in Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Machine Learning collectively, the Factmata team is creating an AI-assisted tool for everyday internet users to verify content in real-time.

The company’s long-term goal is to build a “trust score” for online content so readers can take full charge of the information they consume.

Looking to hire the best remote talent? See how Arc can help you:

⚡️ Find the world’s top developers, designers, and marketers
⚡️ Hire 4x faster with fully vetted candidates

⚡️ Save up to 58% with global hires

Hire top talent with Arc risk-free →

Google Digital News Initiative

Factmata received funding from Google as part of the Google Digital News Initiative in 2016. Factmata needed to create a prototype in less than one month with the funding.

The prototype would be built as a Chrome extension, and the team needed assistance with front-end development to complete it before the tight deadline.

Mentors Make the Best Software Developers

Under such time pressure, the CEO of Factmata, Dhruv Ghulati, turned to Arc (formerly CodementorX) for help. Dhruv had previously connected with an NLP expert on Codementor, the community Arc is built on, and had a great experience with the platform.

He believes that developers who teach others to program must be much better at identifying errors, working cohesively with others, and understanding half-finished repos — these skills were exactly what they needed for the Google Digital News Initiative project.

Therefore, he was confident that he could find a top front-end developer who meets his needs on Arc.

Read More: Front-End Developer Job Description: Guide, Sample Template & More

Fact-checking Chrome Extension

Given the time urgency of Dhruv’s request, the Arc team recommended hiring a senior React developer who previously worked for HP and Disney within 48 hours to kick off the engagement.

The developer went on to help Factmata complete the prototype before the deadline.

factmata mockup design and function
An early mockup of Factmata’s prototype for the Google DNI project.

Here is how the Chrome extension prototype works: whenever a user comes across a statement online, the AI-assisted tool will provide data that is relevant to the statement.

The goal is to reduce the time and effort an average person takes to validate a piece of information to make better decisions accordingly. The tool serves as the user-facing side for Factmata’s underlying fact-checking technology, which is critical to the company’s overall roadmap.

Arc allowed Factmata to finish its project on a short deadline effectively, due to its range of developers with very specialised skillsets who have had experience in major companies.

Dhruv Ghulati, Founder and CEO of Factmata

While Factmata is still developing the product that is scheduled for release in 2018, they have already raised a seed-round investment from Mark Cuban, Zynga founder Mark Pincus, and Brightmail founder Sunil Paul.

Unquestionably, fake news is a hard problem to tackle, but with the talented team Factmata has assembled, Dhruv is optimistic about their journey ahead.

You can also try Arc, your shortcut to the world’s best remote talent:

⚡️ Access 350,000 top developers, designers, and marketers
⚡️ Vetted and ready to interview
⚡️ Freelance or full-time

Try Arc and hire top talent now →

Read More: Andela vs Toptal vs Turing vs Arc: Which is the Best Andela Alternative?

Editor’s Note: CodementorX has been superseded by Arc. References have been updated throughout to reflect the new name.

Written by
Arc Team
Join the discussion