Addressing a town-hall meeting at the Indian Institute of Technology-Delhi (IIT-Delhi), Dorsey said fake news is a way too big category.
“The real problem is not misinformation per se as jokes can also be categorized as misinfomation. But misinformation that is spread with the intent to mislead people is a real problem,” stressed the Twitter CEO who isin India for a week-long maiden visit.
Dorsey, who got a rousing reception at IIT-Delhi with the students cheering the young entrepreneur with screams, likened solving the problem of misleading information to that of addressing a security issue, or building a lock.
“No one can build a perfect lock, but we need to stay ahead of our attackers. AI could probably help,” Dorsey told the audience.
Conversations, Dorsey said, can help solve a lot of problems and encouraged the youth to ask tough questions to their leaders. “You should ask your leaders what they are doing about solving global problems like climate change or what they are doing about having universal basic income,” he told the audience.
Twitter India also launched a new initiative titled #PowerOf18 at the event, aimed at encouraging youth to contribute in public debates and participate in civic engagement for the upcoming election season.
#PowerOf18 will encourage the youth to become change makers and “join the most important public conversation for the country — the state and national elections,” said Maya Hari, Vice-President and Managing Director, Asia Pacific, Twitter.
Five Indian states — Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Telangana and Mizoram — are currently facing polls.
The electorate in Chhattisgarh on Monday exercised their franchise in the first phase of the two-phase Assembly polls in the state. The results from all five states will be declared on December 11.
Earlier in the day, the Twitter CEO met Congress President Rahul Gandhi and discussed various steps the social network was taking to curb the spread of fake news and boost a healthy conversation on its platform.
Dorsey also met Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama over the past weekend.
The micro-blogging site since then has stepped up its efforts to curb the spread of divisive messages and fake news on its platform.
To further protect the integrity of elections, Twitter recently announced that it would now delete fake accounts engaged in a variety of emergent, malicious behaviors.