Over the weekend, Twitter told 677,775 people via email that they interacted with Russian propaganda during the 2016 presidential election. But according to Kate Starbird, an assistant professor at the University of Washington, that's far from enough.
In a Twitter thread on Saturday, Starbird shared her recent research into social networks and the "echo chambers" they create. Her team successfully identified that polarized tweets are one way people, including Russian trolls, can effectively manipulate conversations.
SEE ALSO: Twitter to notify users who got played by Russian propaganda accountsIn an academic paper titled "Examining Trolls and Polarization with a Retweet Network," the researchers used previous research on Twitter discourse about the #BlackLivesMatter movement and police-related shootings in 2016 to analyze how Russian troll accounts played a part.
Starbird highlighted a figure from the paper that shows retweets of troll accounts:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Using Twitter's publicly available data, the researchers collected related tweets from Dec. 31, 2015 to Oct. 5, 2016. They searched for keywords “shooting," “shooter," “gun shot," and “gun man" and then narrowed that set of nearly 59 million tweets to 248,719 that also contained either “#BlackLivesMatter,” “#BlueLivesMatter,” or “#AllLivesMatter."
After Twitter released a list of accounts that were tied to Russian troll factories, the researchers cross-referenced and incorporated them into the data set.
"We observe that retweets of troll accounts are largely contained within each cluster, suggesting that the RU-IRA trolls participated in distinct information flow networks," the paper reads. "We also note that retweets of troll accounts appear more pervasive in the left-leaning cluster than on the right-leaning cluster, suggesting greater infiltration with the left-leaning side of the conversation."
As the research showed, the troll accounts retweet each other.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Twitter shared in its email to users that it was committed to identifying and taking action against "coordinated malicious activity." But as Starbird and her team of researchers at the University of Washington showed, most of the damage has already been done.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
On Monday, Facebook executives and outside experts released their thoughts on the negative effects social media has had on democracy.
"From the Arab Spring to robust elections around the globe, social media seemed like a positive," wrote Katie Harbath,a global politics and government outreach director at Facebook. "The last US presidential campaign changed that, with foreign interference that Facebook should have been quicker to identify to the rise of 'fake news' and echo chambers."
Twitter's Public Policy blog has kept users up to date — well, belatedly, by U.S. lawmakers' standards — on the investigation into the use of its platform during 2016 election. But the company hasn't dived quite as deep into the psychological consequences, at least not publicly. Twitter declined to comment on the University of Washington study.
For now, Starbird and other researchers can continue investigating how our digital conversations take shape — and they'll most likely use the same platforms they're studying to disseminate their insights.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Study reveals how Russian trolls manipulated Twitter conversations-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
234
浏览
5267
获赞
45
'Bring Your Kids to Work Day' didn't go so well for Sarah Huckabee Sanders
White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders probably thought holding a mock press briefing onAmazon's QVC
Even in these dark online times, there are places on the internet that manage to shine through and o10 hilarious celebrity statue fails
Why must we unlock the dreaded uncanny valley every time we create the likeness of a famous person?It sure looks like Instagram is about to copy Pinterest's collections
Instagramis borrowing yet another ideafrom Pinterest.According to Techcrunch, code hidden inside theEU is investigating Apple Pay and App Store for breaking competition rules
The European Commission has launched two formal investigations into Apple's business practices overFacebook bans four armed rebel groups in Myanmar
Facebook is continuing to clamp down on users in Myanmarwho are using the service to further ethnicWish your crush a 'Happy Valentine's Day' with these wonderfully witty cards
Valentine's Day is fast approaching, which means love is in the air. But this year we want to spreadThe complex allure of cursed images
Everyone has a guilty internet pleasure.Some spice up their time online by watching porn in an incogTwitter flags another Trump tweet for 'abusive behavior'
The dam has broken. Twitter once again slapped a label on a Donald Trump tweet Tuesday, writing thatInstagram seems to be testing direct messaging on web
There's no dearth of messaging platforms on the web, but Instagram DMs have likely become a big partA virtual reality 'Doctor Who' film is coming to a headset near you
If you've always wanted know what it's like to travel through space and time, then this is for you.This guy found a working 30
There are objects in our lives that will forever be tied to childhood: a favorite toy, for example,Google launches new AR tool to visualise social distancing rules
We're all adjusting to a new, socially distant way of life. Here to help with that is a new tool froHere's what Trump's tweets about 5G and 6G are really about
Did the President just add a digit to a concept he doesn't understand to make it sound even better?Nest put a microphone in its security hub without informing customers
It's not every day you get a straight up "our bad" from a tech giant.Google announced in early Febru