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Snurb — Thursday 25 April 2024 22:50

Making Sense of the Intersections between Alternative News and Conspiracy Theories

Politics | Polarisation | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | FGZ RISC 2024 |

The afternoon at the Indicators of Social Cohesion symposium in Hamburg starts with the excellent Lena Frischlich, who shifts our focus to the question of conspiracy theories as they circulate in transnational counterpublic spheres. The digital environment provides many opportunities for new political movements, and many of them are positive in nature, but there are also many opportunities for what Thorsten Quandt has described as ‘dark participation’.

What circulates here might be misinformation (claims that counter the currently available evidence, intentionally or not); selective information choices; and purposeful, fabricated disinformation. Typical disinformation campaigns might place deceptive information in an otherwise …

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Snurb — Thursday 25 April 2024 19:42

Polarised Debates about Climate Protests in German News and Social Media

Politics | Polarisation | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Twitter | FGZ RISC 2024 |

The next session at the Indicators of Social Cohesion symposium starts with a presentation by Hendrik Meyer, whose focus is on polarised debates around climate protests by groups like Letzte Generation or Extinction Rebellion. Such debates do not take place in a vacuum, however, but are informed and framed by media reporting. Is such reporting polarising these debates? What might this polarisation lead to?

There is a communicative side to polarisation processes, then – this can be understood as discursive polarisation: the divergence of a sphere of consensus into multiple such spheres that represent a disrupted public sphere. This might …

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Snurb — Thursday 25 April 2024 18:02

Destructive Polarisation in the Voice to Parliament Referendum: A Preliminary Assessment

Politics | Elections | Government | Polarisation | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Twitter | Dynamics of Partisanship and Polarisation in Online Public Debate (ARC Laureate Fellowship) | FGZ RISC 2024 |

It is an unseasonably cold Thursday morning in Hamburg, and after a great opening session last night with Aleksandra Urman, Mykola Makhortykh, and Jing Zeng we are now starting the first full day of the Indicators of Social Cohesion symposium. I’m presenting the morning keynote, on our current work assessing the news and social media debate around Australia’s failed Voice to Parliament referendum as a possible case of destructive polarisation.More on this as the research develops, but for now my slides are here:

Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case of the Australian Voice to Parliament …
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Snurb — Monday 22 April 2024 04:20

Are We Heading for Another Facebook News Ban?

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook |

Over the past month, Meta has been in the news again for its troubled relationship with news and news publishers in Australia and elsewhere, and several media outlets have asked me to provide some commentary on recent developments. Two major new announcements from Meta prompted this: first, the news that it would not renew its agreements with some Australian news publishers to voluntarily share a small amount of its advertising revenue with them; and second, the announcement that it would progressively downrank news content on Instagram.

This follows on, of course, from the brief ban of all news content on …

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Snurb — Saturday 24 February 2024 00:43

Patterns in Commenting on the YouTube Videos of Alexey Navalny

Politics | Government | Polarisation | Social Media | Streaming Media | I-POLHYS 2024 |

The final speaker in this I-POLHYS 2024 session, and indeed the symposium overall, is Aidar Zinnatullin, who shifts our focus to Russia. This will examine the period in Russia before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine (from 2015 to 2021), when it was already a depoliticised society under authoritarian leadership and political stability was the central mantra of Putin’s rule. The implied social contract here was to provide increased prosperity for the people as long as they did not become politically active.

The Russian opposition under Alexey Navalny managed to cut through this stasis by producing popular and engaging content and …

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Snurb — Saturday 24 February 2024 00:41

Politicians and Media as Influencers of Social Media Polarisation during the Qatargate Scandal

Politics | Government | Polarisation | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Facebook | I-POLHYS 2024 |

The next speaker in this I-POLHYS 2024 session is Rita Marchetti, who shifts our attention to another scandal: the Qatargate case. She notes the limited attention of media scholars to corruption issues, even in spite of growing funding for anticorruption studies of legacy media – the potential role of social media in anticorruption activism has received very limited attention, in particular. There is more interest from economics than media scholars in this, it seems.

Italy has long been perceived as suffering from corruption, and this is frustrating citizens and politicians – but recent corruption indices do document that corruption remains …

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Snurb — Friday 23 February 2024 19:56

Reviewing the Performance of Automated Incivility Classifiers

Politics | Polarisation | 'Big Data' | Artificial Intelligence | Social Media | I-POLHYS 2024 |

The next speaker in this I-POLHYS 2024 session is Patrícia Rossini, who is also focussing on incivility. She begins by noting that this is a feature, and not a bug, of social media, and that conventional empirical research into incivility on social media tends to examine blatant forms (name-calling, profanity) rather than implementing more sophisticated perspectives.

Off-the-shelf solutions for such research like the Google Perspective API also tend to implement these fairly generic ideas, and often produce a merely binary score that shows whether incivility is or is not present. Such tools are often trained for industry rather than scholarly …

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Snurb — Friday 23 February 2024 19:52

Drivers of Engagement with Mis- and Disinformation and Their Impact on Polarisation

Politics | Polarisation | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | I-POLHYS 2024 |

The second day at I-POLHYS 2024 starts with a paper by the great Laura Ianelli and Giada Marino, who will recap I-POLHYS research activities on the connections between polarisation and problematic information. These concepts have been increasingly connected in the literature, and Laura and Giada conducted a systematic literature review of such research – yet only a small handful of the articles referencing both phenomena actually address them in any meaningful way; elsewhere the terms are more often used as buzzwords.

Both phenomena suffer from ambiguous definitions and a blending with other problematic concepts (‘echo chambers’, ‘filter bubbles’) – but …

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Snurb — Friday 23 February 2024 01:47

Diagnosing Destructive Polarisation in the Voice to Parliament Referendum

Politics | Elections | Government | Polarisation | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Facebook | Twitter | Dynamics of Partisanship and Polarisation in Online Public Debate (ARC Laureate Fellowship) | I-POLHYS 2024 |

And we’ll finish the day at I-POLHYS 2024 with my keynote, which builds on the work of my Australian Laureate Fellowship team to review the types of polarisation that have been identified in the literature and develop the concept of destructive polarisation as a particularly concerning stage of polarisation dynamics. Our research proposes five distinct symptoms of destructive polarisation – and in the keynote I reflect on the recent Australian referendum on an Indigenous Voice to Parliament to explore to what extent these five symptoms of destructive polarisation were present in the news and digital media debates in the lead-up …

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Snurb — Friday 23 February 2024 01:26

Intersectional Misrepresentations of ‘Noncompliant’ Women as a Driver of Polarisation

Politics | Polarisation | Social Media | Twitter | I-POLHYS 2024 |

The next speakers at I-POLHYS 2024 are Elena Pavan and Antonio Martella, whose interest is in polarised intersectionality in online debates, where exclusion is often weaponised. This shifts our understanding of political polarisation beyond (party-) political actors, and instead centres on the interlocking dimensions of oppression and discrimination along multiple aspects of identity that are operationalised in polarised debate.

Polarisation on intersectional aspects is not necessarily aligned with a simple left/right political spectrum, but proceeds by valorising specific in-group identities and excluding the identities of out-groups that are positioned as undesirable and unacceptable. This exclusion is often carried out on …

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Beyond Interaction Networks: An Introduction to Practice Mapping (ACSPRI 2024)

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Untangling the Furball: A Practice Mapping Approach to the Analysis of Multimodal Interactions in Social Networks (Social Media + Society)

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Inside the Moral Panic at Australia's 'First of Its Kind' Summit about Kids on Social Media (Crikey)

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