Anyone who's been online over the last several years knows all about "fact-checks."
Those are statements that purportedly are assembled by experts for companies like Facebook or Twitter – or media outlets like legacy newspaper corporations – that claim to express the truthfulness of online statements.
But now Americans know that those comments essentially are used to try to direct the narrative on an issue, whether it is global warming or corruption in the Democrat party.
It's because Facebook has admitted in a court filing its "fact-checks" are nothing but someone's opinion.
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