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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 22:06

Conspiracy Theory Followers as Interpretive Communities

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | AoIR 2022 |

For the final (boo!) session at AoIR 2022 I’m in a session on feminist approaches to disinformation, and Alice Marwick is already in full flight and discussing the followers of conspiracy theories as interpretive communities. They are social phenomena, communities, and connected by the Internet; their members are socialised into ways of knowledge-making and understanding over time, building their conspiratorial literacy that enables them to make connections between conspiracist factoids and produce counterfactual narrative.

Notably, there are a fair number of young people of colour involved in these conspiracy theories, well beyond the ‘Fox Mulder’ stereotype of the …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 20:19

The Evolution of Conspiracy Theories as a Form of Connective Action

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Social Media Network Mapping | AoIR 2022 |

The next speaker in this AoIR 2022 session is Marc Tuters. He begins by noting the ‘dark sense of foreboding’ that is present in the world today, and notes that this is determined at least in part by the mediation of the current moment. Such foreboding provides the ground for the dissemination of material related to COVID-19 conspiracy theories, but this dissemination also blurs a variety of conspiracist material with other posts that in turn make fun of these conspiracy theories.

Conspiracy theorists interpret supposedly ‘hidden knowledge’ and connect it across domains in order to support their worldviews; this develops …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 20:18

COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories on Telegram

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | AoIR 2022 |

The next speakers in this AoIR 2022 session are Eugenia Siapera and Sanaz Rasti (I think – sorry, missed Sanaz’s last name). Their focus is on alt-tech platforms, and while they point out that alternative platforms are not necessarily only for the far right, there are some substantial far-right uses of these platforms at this point. This paper especially investigates the Telegram platform. Such platforms have been used as a refuge for refugees from mainstream platforms following their deplatforming, and enable them to further foment their extreme views; they have played a role in a range of political debates …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 20:17

Understanding the Twitter Compliance API

Social Media | Twitter | AoIR 2022 |

The final day at AoIR 2022 starts with a session on toxic behaviour, and a paper by Marco Bastos and Shawn Walker on the Twitter Compliance API. Twitter has a number of APIs: best known of these are the REST API (access to read and write Twitter data), Search API (to search tweets from the past seven days), and Streaming API (to produce a continuous stream of new tweets matching the search terms). The Search API is somewhat unreliable when searching for past tweets, while the Streaming API requires a permanent, 100% uptime connection to produce gapless information streams.

Finally …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 02:29

COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories on Twitter in Nigeria and South Africa

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Social Media Network Mapping | Twitter | AoIR 2022 |

The final speakers in this AoIR 2022 session are Matti Pohjonen and Stephanie Diepeveen, whose focus is on the COVID-19 infodemic that emerged alongside the actual pandemic itself. The global nature of the pandemic meant that the infodemic, too, was global, but such disinformation disseminated in radically different ways in different parts of the world, due to local specificities. So, this research is interested in the categorical markers for information deemed to be (un)trustworthy in local contexts, the reflection of local milieux by global conspiracy theories, and the localised analysis of this research.

The project gathered data from Twitter in …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 02:27

Visual Imagery, Anger, and Anxiety as Predictors of Belief, Sharing, and Fact-Checking

‘Fake News’ | Social Media | AoIR 2022 |

The next speaker in this AoIR 2022 session is Cristian Vaccari, who provides a global perspective on visual disinformation. Visual content enjoys a cognitive advantage over text, and is more likely to be treated as realistic; verbal content, too, is more likely to be treated as true if it is accompanied by related images. Most recent social media platforms have a strong audiovisual component, therefore, but equally we have seen a recent rise in visual disinformation.

Images may also elicit emotions more effectively than text, and emotions in turn have implications for how information is processed: anxiety motivates people to …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 02:25

Commenting Patterns on YouTube during the COP26 Summit

Politics | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Social Media Network Mapping | Streaming Media | AoIR 2022 |

The final AoIR 2022 session for today starts with Christian Ritter, whose interest is in journalistic newsmaking on YouTube during the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow in late 2021. The global nature of YouTube potentially also enables decolonising discourses about climate change. The present project is interested in exploring the role of professional news organisations in covering COP26 on YouTube, which actors were given the opportunity to drive the meaning of specific terms and debates, and what themes emerged in the comments on the YouTube videos.

The project gathered video posts and comments from YouTube that referred to COP26 over …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 00:44

Hashtag Activism against Ableist Perspectives in Managing the COVID-19 Pandemic

Government | Social Media | Twitter | AoIR 2022 |

The final speaker in this AoIR 2022 session is Ailea Grace Merriam-Pigg, whose focus is on references to co-morbidities in discussions of COVID-19: much of the rhetoric here implied that the death of some disabled people as a result of COVID-19 was simply a fact of life that was to be accepted. Disability studies have long shown that disability is often stigmatised as a form of abnormality; this is tied to capitalist logics, and often leads to the marginalisation and infantilisation of disability – positioning disability a as form of deviancy.

During COVID-19, this led to the emergence of the …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 00:43

Pseudoanonymous Accounts Discussing COVID-19 Policies in Finland

Politics | Government | Social Media | Twitter | AoIR 2022 |

The next speakers in this AoIR 2022 session are Tuomas Heikkilä and Salla-Maaria Laaksonen, whose interest is in pseudoanonymous communicators during the COVID-19 crisis. These users use semi-stable pseudonyms, so they are neither identifiable nor fully anonymous, and the present study explored their role in political debate around the pandemic. This builds on the theory of connective action: organised communication without the presence of a central organisation coordinating activities. This can be more personal, more scalable, and more rapid.

Anonymity has long been studied online; it enables public participation while concealing real-name identities. But the platformisation of the Internet has …

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Snurb — Saturday 5 November 2022 00:41

The Stressful Experience of Self-Service Technology Use during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Internet Technologies | Mobile and Wireless Technologies | AoIR 2022 |

The next speakers in this AoIR 2022 session are Lisa Waldenburger and Jeffrey Wimmer. They begin by noting the rise in digital stress – at work, at home, and in public spaces –, and their project is designed to explore the experience of and coping mechanisms for such digital stress by users. Such stress is often caused by a self-diagnosed lack of media literacy, especially as self-service technologies come to substitute for previously non-digital and interpersonal interactions; these technologies contribute to economic rationalisation and social exclusion especially for non-tech-savvy and older people.

These moves, and their accompanying stresses, were exacerbated …

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Recent Work

Presentations and Talks

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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Brightest before Dawn (CD, 2011)

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Gatewatching and News Curation: The Lecture Series

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