The saving grace

22-year-old MIT graduate Lyric Jain is changing the way we consume news through Logically'.

Update: 2018-08-21 21:29 GMT
Lyric Jain

We as a country have witnessed the horrendous repercussions of fake news that is circulated day in day out through social media platforms like WhatsApp, Facebook, and electronic media to name a few — be it social uproar through malicious trolls or taking violent turns with increasing number of lynchings. At this critical juncture of advancement in technology and politics, Lyric Jain, the 22-year-old MIT graduate’s ‘Logically’, a platform that ensures users consume reliable news and combat fake news comes as a reliever.

It was after Lyric witnessed the breakdown in civic and political discourse during Brexit and the 2016 presidential election in the US, that he got to work towards tackling the spread of misinformation and the negative effects it has on people’s psyche and subsequently influencing the democratic process. “In July 2017, while studying at MIT, I conducted preliminary market research which demonstrated there was both a need and a market for a solution to this problem. My first course of action was designing a machine-learning algorithm, that ‘Logically’ now uses as part of an ensemble of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, to detect logical fallacy, inaccuracies and bias,” shares Lyric.

Talking further about the technology used to create ‘Logically’ — the platform that allows users to detect fake news and track a story back to its original source, the Mysore born entrepreneur says, “The platform gathers the biggest news stories and highlights the features that make news fake — like headline-article dissonance, logical fallacy, political bias, and inaccurate statistics — all using an ensemble of machine learning algorithms. The AI incorporates three large ensemble models to determine the credibility of information shown to users. These are metadata — the quality of the source the information comes from, the content itself — if it contains inaccurate or misleading claims, and social network behaviour — how the story proliferates and spreads.”

Illuminating the quality of information across articles, ‘Logically’ provides users with a transparent and insightful view that allows them to determine how true the news really is.

While being able to detect fake news, ‘Logically’ will also allow users to follow a story as it unfolds. “We highlight the most recent coverage of each story, and provide users with a visual representation of how the story evolved over time rather than simply providing a single article,” shares Lyric, who recognises the need for a solution to navigate potentially deceptive image and video technologies like deepfakes. “Our product roadmap includes expanding its capabilities to do the same with picture, video and audio,” he adds.

‘Logically’ will launch in UK in September this year and a month later in India. “In all three countries — India, UK and US, the highly emotive nature of fake news stories make people quick to react but it’s the platforms used to spread the fake news that highlight the major differences between them. The consequences of fake news in India have been fatal, particularly due to the way these stories spread across messaging applications like WhatsApp which has over 200 million users in India. Because the WhatsApp messaging system is encrypted, it makes it extremely difficult for law enforcement to intervene and stop fake stories spread.” But how will ‘Logically’ as a fake news combating platform work?

“Logically will use AI to enable people to accurately assess the validity of information faster than any human can,” shares Lyric, who always had a keen business acumen. He started his first business venture at the age of 16 when he designed and developed the ABS secure lock which has now become an industry standard.

HT11

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