It's not exactly breaking news that far-right misinformation — better known to most as "lies" — tends to do Bayowell on Facebook. But it's telling that the biggest takeaway from a new study that attempts to understand the phenomenon is that Facebook itself is our chief obstacle to understanding more.
New York University's Cybersecurity for Democracy team released a paper on Wednesday bearing the title "Far-right sources on Facebook [are] more engaging." The data isn't terribly surprising if you've been paying any attention to the news of the past half-decade (and longer) and the role social media has played.
The report notes that content flowing out from sources rated by independent news rating services as far-right "consistently received the highest engagement per follower of any partisan group." Repeat offenders are also rewarded, with "frequent purveyors of far-right misinformation" seeing significantly more engagement, by more than half, than other far-right sources.
Misinformation also exists on the far-left and in the political center — for the latter, primarily in the realm of not openly partisan health-focused websites — but it's not received in the same way. In fact, the study found that these sources face a "misinformation penalty" for misleading their users, unlike right-leaning sources.
Again, none of this is terribly surprising. Facebook's misinformation problem is well-documented and spans multiple areas of interest. The problem, as the study explicitly notes, is Facebook itself. Meaning the company that sets the rules, not the platform it built. Any attempts to better understand how information flows on the social network are going to suffer as long as Facebook doesn't play ball.
The study spells out the issue explicitly:
Our findings are limited by the lack of data provided by Facebook, which makes public information about engagement — reactions, shares, and comments — but not impressions — how many people actually saw a piece of content, spent time reading it, and so on. Such information would help researchers better analyze whyfar-right content is more engaging. Further research is needed to determine to what extent Facebook algorithms feed into this trend, for example, and to conduct analysis across other popular platforms, such as YouTube, Twitter, and TikTok. Without greater transparency and access to data, such research questions are out of reach.
That chunk of text in particular makes the rest of the study a frustrating read. There are all of these data points signaling that something is deeply wrong on Facebook, with lies not only flourishing but being rewarded. But the company's lack of transparency means we're stuck with having to trust Facebook to do the right thing.
Not exactly an easy idea to trust, given the history. In fact, Facebook has already demonstrated — recently! — how it would prefer to keep third parties away from full-featured data analysis of user behavior on the social network.
In late October, just before Election Day, a report surfaced on the struggles faced by another NYU program in dealing with Facebook. The NYU Ad Observatory research project set out to look at how politicians were spending money and which voters they were targeting on the social network in the run-up to the election.
SEE ALSO: Twitter will now ban users for spreading coronavirus vaccine misinformationThe project depended on a small army of volunteers, 6,500 of them, as well as a browser extension built to scrape certain kinds of data on the site. Facebook sent a letter threatening "additional enforcement action" if the project wasn't shut down, with any collected data to be deleted. But that was before the news went public — Facebook ultimately relented and promised to take no action until "well after the election."
The Ad Observatory incident doesn't tie directly to this new misinformation study, but the parallels are clear enough. Facebook is fiercely protective of its hold on usage data — which, let's be clear, is not the same thing as userdata — and doesn't seem to want any help fixing its own problems.
Whatever the reason for that may be internally, from the outsideit looks an awful lot like Facebook is more focused on preserving its own interests, not public interests. Given the impact social media has had and continues to have on socio-political shifts in public sentiment, that possibility should alarm everyone.
Topics Facebook Social Media
Namibia vs. Oman 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for freeBest Keurig deal: Save on the Keurig KByteDance fires 61 employees in antiAsus ROG Ally X handsUnited States vs. Canada 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for freeAir China announces purchase of 100 C919 aircraft for $10.8 billion · TechNodeSwiatek vs. Vondrousova 2024 livestream: Watch French Open for freeHow to strikethrough text on Google DocsXiaomi set to unveil CIVI 4 Pro Disney Princess Edition · TechNodeChinese AI firm unveils SoraTSMC's advanced packaging capacity fully booked for the next two years · TechNodeEven the fat bear cubs are extremely fat. Here's the fattest one.‘What? Things change!’ The ‘I’m a Mac guy’ actor, Justin Long, does new ad for Windows PCsTikTok challenges US law forcing owner ByteDance to sell or face nationwide ban · TechNodeUniversal allows artists back to TikTok under a new deal · TechNodeWhat does a meteorite taste like? Someone found out and bottled it.Wordle today: The answer and hints for June 2The fat bears are fighting. But not like you'd expect.What does a meteorite taste like? Someone found out and bottled it.China’s EV price war escalating to “unsustainable” levels, says Bosch executive · TechNode Shudder's 'The Seed' review: A gory invasion horror that misses the mark Google's new Doodle celebrates International Women's Day The 'on brand' childhood memories meme is taking over Twitter The UK's new digital minister hasn't tweeted since 2015 A reminder for Russians: Telegram is not end How to start playing 'Dota 2' A collection of photos of Neymar lying on the ground. Amazon to close all Pop Up, 4 Justin Bieber confirms engagement to Hailey Baldwin in gushing Instagram post 'Queer Eye's first trans participant speaks out about the episode Uber Explore adds activities to the ride ‘West Side Story’ should have let Anybodys sing ‘Cool’ 'The Batman' review roundup: What do critics think of the newest DC movie? 'The Batman' Review: It's time for an R YouTube star Ryker Gamble dies after falling from waterfall J.K. Rowling's brutal tweet just summed up the absolute state of British politics People are baffled by the number of water bottles Harry and Meghan were given in Ireland A rocket will crash into the moon. It'll leave way more than a scar. 'Euphoria' has a flashback problem Twitter adds warning label to tweets sharing links from Russian state
2.4756s , 8228.4453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Bayo】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network