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Snurb — Thursday 1 November 2018 19:19

Polarisation in Comments on News Outlets’ Facebook Pages

Politics | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Facebook | ECREA 2018 |

The next speaker in this ECREA 2018 session is Edda Humprecht, whose focus is on polarisation on Facebook. There is evidence of considerable negativity on this platform, and this may affect users’ perceptions of the world around them; in particular, it may increase their perception of societal polarisation. News outlets operating on the platform are now often accepting negative comments because they do not want to be seen to be censoring user comments – yet at the same time they are complaining about the negative aspects of user participation on social media.

Potential drivers for such negativity may include …

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Snurb — Thursday 1 November 2018 19:17

Perceived Political Polarisation in Germany and Switzerland

Politics | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Facebook | ECREA 2018 |

The next speaker in this ECREA 2018 session is Jasmin Kadel, who presents a comparative study of polarisation across Switzerland and Germany. Polarisation can be understood along factual (across issues), perceived (misjudgments about polarisation in society), and affective dimensions (appreciation of co-partisan others); the study examined such polarisation amongst adult newspaper readers in both countries.

Factual polarisation turned out to be slightly stronger in Switzerland than in Germany, but it is weak in both countries; perceived polarisation, however, is greater in both countries, and especially so in Germany – Germans are less polarised but see them selves as more polarised …

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Snurb — Thursday 1 November 2018 19:17

Assessing Polarisation through Issue Horizon Compatibility

Politics | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | ECREA 2018 |

The first session on this first full day at ECREA 2018 is on polarisation, and starts with Melanie Magin. She begins by highlighting the potential deleterious effects of polarisation on society: societies need a common meeting ground, and this has traditionally been provided by the news media and their agenda-setting function. But the diversification of information sources and channels may contribute to fragmenting this, and the algorithmic selection of content in these channels could aid this fragmentation – yet there is very little empirical evidence for the existence of the echo chambers or filter bubbles this is said to cause …

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Snurb — Thursday 1 November 2018 05:08

Towards Data Justice in a Datafied Society

Politics | Internet Technologies | 'Big Data' | ECREA 2018 |

The second keynote speaker in this opening evening at ECREA 2018 is Lina Dencik, whose keynote at last weekend’s iCS Symposium I covered a few days ago; here, her focus is on resistance in the datafied society. Such resistance is important in the present moment, and scholars have an increasingly important and more and more politicised role in this context.

There has been an overall, ongoing shift towards data-driven governance in recent years, leading to the emergence of a genuinely – but far from universally beneficially – datafied society. We have already seen a long history of digital surveillance, exemplified …

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Snurb — Thursday 1 November 2018 04:20

How Divergent Skills Affect the Online Participation Divide

Produsers and Produsage | Produsage Communities | Wikipedia | Internet Technologies | ECREA 2018 |

At the conclusion of my travels in Canada and Europe, I’ve made my way to Lugano for ECREA2018. We start with the first of two keynotes, by Eszter Hargittai, whose focus is on the digital divide in online participation. The fundamental question here is who benefits the most from Internet participation, and who does not: do participation divides facilitate social mobility or reproduce social divides?

The key point here is that digital divides cannot be solved by mere connectivity: getting online does not equate to using the Internet effectively and efficiently. Rather, such uses continue to be moderated by …

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Snurb — Monday 29 October 2018 00:39

The Microcelebrity Performance Strategies of a Russian Troll Account

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

The final speaker at this iCS Symposium is Yiping Xia, who returns our focus to the Russian-operated Internet Research Agency troll farm. One of their most successful accounts was @Jenn_Abrams, active across multiple platforms (Wordpress, Medium, Telegram, Gab) and followed by some 70,000 accounts on Twitter.

What is interesting about Jenna Abrams ‘her’-self is the creation of a distinct persona and mode of self-presentation; this account represents an interpersonal mode of disinformation. This is a form of the authenticity work which is also common to the online persona construction by ordinary users, strategic actors …

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Snurb — Monday 29 October 2018 00:18

Replicating Spearphishing Methods in Scholarly Research

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Twitter | iCS 2018 |

The next speaker in this iCS Symposium is Michael Bossetta, who focusses on the specific problems of spearphishing, disinformation, and bot activity on social media platforms. Could these problems be investigated by researchers conducting a controlled, simulated cyberattack themselves?

Michael pursued this especially for the context of Twitter, which seems most conducive to such research. This drew on the Python software SNAP_R, which captures the recent tweets from a defined list of accounts and uses Markov models to generate new messages to these users that to speak to their apparent interests. Michael created a new Twitter account to post …

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Snurb — Monday 29 October 2018 00:04

New Methods for Detecting Bots across Multiple Platforms

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

The final iCS Symposium session continues the bot theme with a presentation by Pascal Jürgens. Pascal begins by outlining our current dilemma: threats of communicative manipulation via social media are rising, yet our access to the platform data we need to understand these activities is declining. But we may be able to address this dilemma by employing new and different methodologies.

Interestingly, in Germany there are now moves to create a law that requires bots to be labelled – yet this is unlikely to be effective unless there can be a clear definition of bots in the first place, and …

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Snurb — Sunday 28 October 2018 23:47

The Linking Practices of Russian Internet Research Agency Twitter Trolls

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

It’s the final session of the iCS Symposium before we wrap up, and we start with Yevgeniy Golovchenko and a study of Russian trolls on Twitter and YouTube during the 2016 U.S. presidential election. In particular, this project focusses on the accounts run by the now infamous Russian troll factory, the Internet Research Agency (IRA), that have now been uncovered by a number of mainstream social media platforms.

Twitter, in fact, has published a list of the suspected IRA accounts it has detected, and it is now possible to test existing social media datasets for their presence. But what …

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Snurb — Sunday 28 October 2018 22:51

Towards Better Frameworks for Social Media Data Archiving

'Big Data' | Social Media | Internet Content Preservation | iCS 2018 |

The final keynote speaker at this iCS Symposium today is the wonderful Katrin Weller, whose focus is on what we do with social media research data: datasets that have been collected by researchers and have already been utilised in scholarly analysis. How are such datasets shared on and archived by these researchers? Sharing here means directly passing these datasets on for use by others, while archiving preserves them for potential future uses. Both practices potentially advance reproducibility and comparability, reduce digital divides in data accessibility between researchers and research groups, and save time and money in data collection; they are …

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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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Brightest before Dawn (CD, 2011)

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Gatewatching and News Curation: The Lecture Series

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