As part of a new test, Meta will let anyone rate a Community Note or request one for a post, Meta's Chief Information Security Officer Guy Rosen shared on X . After testing the feature in March, the company formally introduced Community Notes as a replacement for its fact-checking program in April of this year. You have to apply to actually write Community Notes, but Meta's new test means that anyone who sees one can rate it to signal whether it's helpful or not. They'll also be able to request a note if a post is incorrect or needs additional context. Based on the screenshot Rosen shared, Meta's rating system is a simple thumbs up or down, but the fact the company is opening the system up to more input at all is one sign of its continued expansion. We’re testing new Community Notes features at Meta: Anyone can now request a note or rate if a note is helpful - Users get notified when posts they’ve interacted with receive a Community Note - 70,000+ contributors have written 15,000+ notes (6% published). Learn more or join:… pic.twitter.com/WCQC3CMnbe — Guy Rosen (@guyro) September 10, 2025 The test also includes a new system for notifying users if they interact with a post that receives a Community Note. Meta did something similar with posts that were fact-checked in the past, so this seems like a good way to let people know if they've read something misleading. Don't expect to be receiving those notifications too often just yet, though. Rosen says that while there are over 70,000 people writing Community Notes and over 15,000 notes have actually been written, only six percent have been published. Meta is still very early in this whole process.