Community Notes 2.0: Meta Unveils Big Update and Surprising Stats

Meta has unveiled a series of updates to its version of Community Notes, the company’s crowd-sourced fact-checking initiative, which it continues to refine as it observes user behavior and identifies areas for improvement.
To begin with, Meta will now allow users to rate the usefulness of each note through a straightforward upvote or downvote option.

As illustrated in this example, users will be able to quickly register whether a Community Note added value by tapping either the thumbs-up or thumbs-down icons. This direct feedback will provide Meta with valuable signals about the relevance of each note, helping to shape how individual notes are presented while also guiding broader refinements to the system.
In addition, Meta is rolling out a new option for users to request a Community Note on any post they encounter, further broadening the scope of feedback.
Finally, the platform is introducing notifications that alert users when a post they’ve engaged with has received a Community Note.

This feature aims to combat misinformation by notifying users if content they previously interacted with has since been flagged. Once a user has shared something, it typically fades from their attention, but the ideas contained within that post often remain lodged in memory. Timely alerts like this may help correct misconceptions and prevent the spread of falsehoods.
Alongside these updates, Meta also shared fresh insights into the growth of Community Notes since the initiative launched in the U.S. back in March.
According to the company, more than 250,000 people have been admitted as contributors, with around 70,000 actively participating in reviewing and responding to notes. While that number may seem modest compared with the potential contributor pool, it’s not surprising that many early sign-ups were casual participants rather than serious contributors.
So far, approximately 15,000 notes have been submitted. However, only 6% of those have been approved and published for users to see. Notably, the system remains U.S.-only at this stage.
This low publication rate mirrors a familiar weakness also seen on X (formerly Twitter), where the majority of proposed Community Notes never appear on the platform.
Some argue this is by design, ensuring that only the most accurate and balanced notes make it through, filtering out biased or irrelevant submissions. On X, however, many notes are excluded due to the requirement that contributors from differing political viewpoints must agree before a note is published. That stipulation has created a major roadblock: when it comes to contentious political topics, consensus is nearly impossible.
As a result, political misinformation often slips through unchecked. Without third-party fact-checkers providing additional scrutiny, false claims can continue to circulate widely across platforms like Facebook, where reach is enormous.
A study conducted last year highlighted this flaw, showing that some of the most problematic falsehoods were also the least likely to attract published Community Notes, precisely because consensus could not be reached.

The findings underscore the core weakness of the system: while it seeks to balance against political bias, in practice it often fails to counter the most divisive—and most dangerous—claims.
Meta’s own statistics now reflect a similar problem, with only a small fraction of submitted notes ever making it to publication.
It’s also worth pointing out that Meta has chosen not to expand Community Notes beyond the U.S., continuing to rely on its established fact-checking partners in other countries. This raises the possibility that the company sees Community Notes as a U.S.-specific solution, perhaps tied to ongoing political dynamics and its relationship with the Trump Administration. Whether Meta eventually decides to expand the feature globally remains an open question.
For now, the updates mark steady, if cautious, progress in Meta’s experiment with crowd-sourced fact-checking. The approach is showing signs of promise—but also clear limitations, as expected.
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