Social media is great for finding out everything almost immediately, however how can you be certain this information is completely factual?
After last year’s election, Facebook came in for a thrashing due to the role it played in propagating misinformation – or ‘fake news,’ as it was named, before the term became a catchall designation for any news people didn’t like. The criticism was well placed: Facebook is the world’s most popular social network, and millions of people look to it daily for news.
But the focus on Facebook let another social network off the hook. Many people’s daily addiction, Twitter.
Though the 140-character network is far smaller than Facebook, it is used heavily by people in media and thus exerts perhaps an even greater sway on the news business.
That’s an issue because Twitter is making the news dumber, and now there is a certain feel to the service that is ‘insidery’ and club-like. It prizes pundit-ready quips over substantive debate, and it tends to elevate the silly over the serious – for several sleepless hours this week it was captivated by ‘covfefe,’ which was essentially a brouhaha over a typo.
But the biggest problem with Twitter’s place in the news is its role in the production and dissemination of propaganda and misinformation. It keeps pushing conspiracy theories — and because lots of people in the media, not to mention many news consumers, don’t quite understand how it works, the precise mechanism is worth digging into.
We recently saw the mechanism in action when another baseless conspiracy theory rose to the top of the news: The idea that the murder last year of Seth Rich, a staff member at the Democratic National Committee, was linked, somehow, to the leaking of Clinton campaign emails. The Fox News host Sean Hannity pushed the theory the loudest, but it was groups on Twitter – or, more specifically, bots on Twitter – that were first to the story and helped make it huge.
Here’s how.
The guts of the news business.
One way to think of today’s disinformation ecosystem is to picture it as a kind of gastrointestinal tract.
At the top end – the mouth, let’s call it – enter the raw materials of propaganda: the memes cooked up by anyone basically.
Then, way down at what we will politely call the ‘other end,’ emerge the packaged narratives primed for widespread dissemination to you and everyone you know. These are the people that dominate talk radio and prime-time cable news, as well as the viral Facebook posts warning you about this or that latest outrage committed.
How do the raw materials become the culture wide narratives and conspiracy theories? The path is variegated and flexible and often stretches across multiple media platforms. Yet in many of the biggest misinformation campaigns of the past year, Twitter played a key role.
Specifically, Twitter often acts as the small bowel of digital news. It’s where political messaging and disinformation get digested, packaged and widely picked up for mass distribution to cable, Facebook and the rest of the world.
This role for Twitter has seemed to grow more intense during (and since) the 2016 campaign. Twitter now functions as a clubhouse for much of the news. It’s where journalists pick up stories, meet sources, promote their work, criticize competitors’ work and workshop takes. In a more subtle way, Twitter has become a place where many journalists unconsciously build and gut-check a worldview — where they develop a sense of what’s important and merits coverage, and what doesn’t.
This makes Twitter a prime target for manipulators: If you can get something big on Twitter, you’re almost guaranteed coverage everywhere.
“When journalists see a story getting big on Twitter, they consider it a kind of responsibility to cover it, even if the story may be an alternate frame or a conspiracy theory,” said Alice Marwick, who was co-author of a recent report on the mechanics of media manipulation for the Data & Society Research Institute. “That’s because if they don’t, they may get accused of bias.”
Twitter is clogged with fake people.
For determined media manipulators, getting something big on Twitter isn’t all that difficult. Unlike Facebook, which requires people to use their real names, Twitter offers users essentially full anonymity, and it makes many of its functions accessible to outside programmers, allowing people to automate their actions on the service.
As a result, numerous easy-to-use online tools let people quickly create thousands of Twitter bots – accounts that look real, but that are controlled by one person.
Twitter’s design also promotes a slavish devotion to metrics: Every tweet comes with a counter of Likes and Retweets, and users come to internalize these metrics as proxies for real-world popularity.
Yet these metrics can be gamed. Because a single Twitter user can create lots of accounts and run them all in a coordinated way, Twitter lets relatively small groups masquerade as far larger ones. If Facebook’s primary danger is its dissemination of fake stories, then Twitter’s is a ginning up of fake people.
“Bots allow groups to speak much more loudly than they would be able to on any other social media platforms – it lets them use Twitter as a megaphone,” said Samuel Woolley, the director for research at Oxford University’s Computational Propaganda Project. “It’s doing something that I call ‘manufacturing consensus,’ or building the illusion of popularity for a candidate or a particular idea.”
How this works for conspiracy theories is relatively straightforward. Outside of Twitter – in message boards or Facebook groups – a group will decide on a particular message to push. Then the deluge begins. Bots flood the network, tweeting and retweeting thousands or hundreds of thousands of messages in support of the story, often accompanied by a branding hashtag – #pizzagate, or, a few weeks ago, #sethrich.
The initial aim isn’t to convince or persuade, but simply to overwhelm – to so completely saturate the network that it seems as if people are talking about a particular story. The biggest prize is to get on Twitter’s Trending Topics list, which is often used as an assignment sheet for the rest of the internet.
This happened in mid-May, just after the Fox affiliate in Washington reported that a private investigator for Mr. Rich’s family had bombshell evidence in the case. The story later fell apart, but that night, Twitter bots went with it.
Hundreds of accounts with few or no followers began tweeting links to the story. By the next morning, #SethRich was trending nationally on Twitter – and the conspiracy theory was getting wide coverage across the right, including, in time, Mr. Hannity.
They may ruin democracy
A Twitter spokesman said the company took bots seriously; it has a dedicated spam-detection team that looks out for bot-based manipulation, and it is constantly improving its tools to spot and shut down bots.
What’s more, because the media is large and chaotic, it is often unclear what role, exactly, bots play in ginning up interest in a story. Conspiracy theories went big long before Twitter was around.
Research suggests that bots are ubiquitous on Twitter. Emilio Ferrara and Alessandro Bessi, researchers at the University of Southern California, found that about a fifth of the election-related conversation on Twitter last year was generated by bots. Most users were blind to them; they treated the bots the same way they treated other users.
“Human users didn’t do a good job of separating bots from other humans,” Ferrara said.
Because they operate unseen, bots catalyze the news: They speed up the process of discovery and dissemination of particular stories, turning an unknown hashtag into the next big thing. A trending hashtag creates a trap for journalists who cover the internet: Even if they cover a conspiracy theory only to debunk it, they’re most likely playing into what the propagandists’ want.
In a more negative way, bots provide an easy way to doubt everything that is seen online. In the same way that the rise of ‘fake news’ gives people a way to cover mistakes by labeling everything ‘fake news,’ the rise of bots might soon allow us to dismiss any online enthusiasm as driven by automation. Any highly retweeted post could be puffed up by bots.
“If you can make something trend, you can almost make it come true,” said Renee DiResta, a technologist who studies bots.
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