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‘Fake News’

Snurb — Saturday 27 October 2018 22:51

Four Key Misunderstandings about ‘Fake News’

Politics | Elections | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | iCS 2018 |

The first keynote at the iCS Symposium is by Alice E. Marwick, whose focus is on the motivations for sharing the various forms of content grouped under the problematic moniker of ‘fake news’. Her recent report with Rebecca Lewis on Media Manipulation and Disinformation Online has shown that such sharing can be highly effective: because so many of us are now sharing news and news-like information online, and because especially younger users and journalists are paying increasing attention to what is happening on social media, it is now possible for mis- and disinformation content to migrate from far-right, fringe spaces …

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Snurb — Saturday 27 October 2018 20:32

New Uses of Social Media Metadata in Critical Research

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | iCS 2018 |

The next paper in this iCS Symposium session is by Amelia Acker and Joan Donovan, and focusses on new approaches to gathering metadata from social media platforms without relying on Application Programming Interfaces. Indeed, platform providers are generally unable to predict all of the ways in which users, including researchers, are likely to engage with their platforms, and this leaves loopholes that researchers are able to exploit.

At the present moment, with API access increasingly limited, we clearly need new methods. Part of the issue here is in how the platforms themselves classify their own data through metadata; media manipulation …

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Snurb — Saturday 27 October 2018 19:56

Platform Power in the Case of WikiLeaks’ Podesta Email Releases

Politics | Elections | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Twitter | iCS 2018 |

After a quick break I’ve made my way to Copenhagen for the iCS Symposium “Locked Out of Social Platforms”, and the first panel of the day starts with a paper by Nicholas Proferes. His focus is on how power is manifested in the platform affordances of social media: these include affordances such as the persistence, visibility, spreadability, and searchability of content.

Nick focusses here on the case of WikiLeaks’ release of the Podesta Emails, from a hack of Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman John Podesta’s email. These were released over thirty batches, starting just after Donald Trump’s infamous Access Hollywood …

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Snurb — Sunday 14 October 2018 04:17

Youth Political Engagement on Social Media in the Age of Trump

Politics | Elections | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Twitter | AoIR 2018 |

I’ve missed another session due to AoIR business, but I’m back for the last paper session at AoIR 2018. We start with Joel Penney, whose focus is on the use of social media by young people in the Trump era. He suggests that young people had moved from dutiful to actualising forms of citizenship, where political engagement is no longer just a duty to the state but aims to realise a better form of politics. Such engagement is also playful and creative, including in more partisan contexts.

Joel pursued these ideas through a focus group-based study of 18 politically …

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Snurb — Friday 12 October 2018 06:53

The Affective Politics of Information Warfare

‘Fake News’ | 'Big Data' | Social Media | AoIR 2018 |

The next speaker in this AoIR 2018 session is Megan Boler, who continues our focus on algorithms. She begins by noting a concern about the affective politics of information warfare, as well as about the increasing targetting of emotions through social media activity.

Such developments have become a great deal more visible since Brexit and the 2016 U.S. presidential election. We have seen many revelations about the use of marketing and behavioural science in targetting and affecting users’ emotions, and all sides of politics have realised the importance of emotion in increasing political polarisation and hyperpartisanship.

Large-scale affects of confusion …

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Snurb — Monday 24 September 2018 16:35

Filter Bubbles in the Australian Twittersphere? (Misinformation and Media 2018)

‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Social Media Network Mapping | TrISMA (ARC LIEF) | Twitter | ARC Future Fellowship | Conferences |

Misinformation and Media Symposium 2018

Filter Bubbles in the Australian Twittersphere?

Axel Bruns

  • 10 Sep. 2018 – Misinformation and Media Symposium 2018, Canberra
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Snurb — Friday 20 July 2018 19:57

Assessing the Activities of Russian Propaganda Accounts on Twitter

Politics | Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Twitter | SM&S 2018 |

The third speaker in this Social Media & Society 2018 session is Johan Farkas, whose focus is on the activities of the Internet Research Agency (IRA) in St. Petersburg, described as the Russian ‘troll factory’ and indicted for its involvement in Russian interference with the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

There are three forms of propaganda that have been identified in past literature: ‘white’ propaganda has a known source; ‘grey’ propaganda has an obfuscated source; and ‘black’ propaganda claims to be from a legitimate source but isn’t. Is this a useful classification in this context? Do the processes of propaganda dissemination …

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Snurb — Friday 20 July 2018 19:38

Approaches to the Computational Identification of ‘Fake News’

Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Twitter | SM&S 2018 |

The next presenter in this Social Media & Society 2018 session is Oluwaseun Ajao, who shifts our focus to the question of ‘fake news’ on Twitter. Why is such content circulated on the platform? In part this is because these stories often generate more impact than ‘real’ news stories: this might result in significant shifts in political opinion, financial gains, or other outcomes that are desirable to the operators behind such initiatives.

The present study explores whether the veracity of a set of tweets might be able to be ascertained through automated content analysis. Are there semantic of linguistic …

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Snurb — Monday 28 May 2018 01:21

Finding Korean Astroturfing Accounts

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Twitter | ICA 2018 |

The next ICA 2018 session I’m attending has started with JungHwan Yang, whose focus is on political astroturfing by non-bots. The 50-Cent Party in China, and the Russian troll army are examples of this, and these are more difficult to detect than bots, because of the human factor.

In the 2012 Korean election, conservative Korean agents were busted for using Twitter accounts to influence the election, and a list of such accounts and the agents was subsequently released; this list of 1,008 accounts and their behaviours was used in the present study to identify the typical behavioural patterns of non-bot …

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Snurb — Sunday 27 May 2018 19:51

Studying the Dissemination of News, ‘Fake’ or Otherwise

Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | ICA 2018 |

The next speaker in this ‘fake news’ session at ICA 2018 is Tommaso Venturini. He begins by noting how bad he feels about researching ‘fake news’: this is largely because the term is so very poorly defined and so frequently misused.

It is vague: researchers mean very different things when they use the term. It is politically dangerous: political actors are misusing it to attack mainstream news media they disagree with. It is indistinguishable from past concepts of mis- and disinformation: there really is no need to introduce a new term for these forms of content. It is charged with …

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