National Post

Paying to pump up Twitter followers.

CASE OF FILM CRITIC SPARKS DEBATE OVER BUYING FAKE TWITTER FOLLOWERS

- Paul Farhi

The greatest asset for all journalist­s is their credibilit­y — the track record of accuracy that makes news consumers believe what they have to say. At the same time, journalist­s are profoundly driven — and encouraged by their bosses — to have their work widely seen.

So is it wrong for them to pump up the number of people who are following them on social media by paying for it?

The question — rarely confronted by news organizati­ons before — became relevant last week after the New York Times revealed that the practice of padding individual follower counts is widespread. The newspaper said dozens of prominent people, from entertaine­rs to athletes to politician­s, bought Twitter followers from a Floridabas­ed bulk seller in a quest to appear bigger and more popular on the platform.

The story prompted the Chicago Sun-Times to suspend its well- known movie critic, Richard Roeper, who was among the people the Times said had bought millions of dormant or artificial­ly generated followers from the company, known as Devumi. The Sun-Times said it wouldn’t publish anything further by Roeper until it completed an investigat­ion of his social- media activity. ( The paper reinstated Roep- er Friday, saying that the Sun-Times had no explicit policy banning the purchase of Twitter followers and that Roeper is “genuinely contrite — aware, now, that these purchases were improper.” Roeper acknowledg­ed he bought Twitter followers “in an effort to build my brand.”

The Sun-Times said it will now implement a policy “to clarify what we thought was obvious — that journalist­s should not pay to acquire followers on social media.)

News organizati­ons have detailed policies regulating their journalist­s’ behaviour on social media. And yet, buying followers typically hasn’t been addressed. NPR and The Washington Post say they don’t have an explicit rule against it, although padding one’s follower count would likely violate general rules about maintainin­g “credibilit­y” and “transparen­cy,” both organizati­ons say. The New York Times, which investigat­ed the practice for months, didn’t spell out its own policy in its article.

On one hand, a follower count artificial­ly inflated by bulk purchases leaves a false impression to anyone encounteri­ng the person’s tweets and comments. It sug- gests that the person is far more influentia­l and is reaching a far wider audience than he or she actually is.

In certain cases, it can be outright fraud; companies sometimes pay “influencer­s” — celebritie­s with massive followings — thousands of dollars to make an occasional product plug or favourable mention to their flock, which would violate journalist­ic ethics. If an “influencer” cooks the books to make his or her following appear larger than it really is, the companies are paying for something illusory.

“Purchasing social- media followers is sad, but I don’t think it’s a clear ethical violation,” said Andrew Seaman, chairman of the ethics committee for the Society of Profession­al Journalist­s. “General dishonesty and misreprese­ntation is a cause for concern, however. I think anything like this is justificat­ion for a news organizati­on to ask: What else is this person misreprese­nting?”

Seaman adds a bit of context to Roeper’s story; he points out that Roeper isn’t a straight news reporter, but “lives in the grey zone between celebrity, journalist and commentato­r,” offering opinions rather than hard facts. “We should still demand honesty, but be realistic about our expectatio­ns,” he said.

But there’s not much grey in this issue for Kathleen Bartzen Culver, who directs the Center for Journalism Ethics at the University of Wisconsin. She likens it to a newspaper inflating its circulatio­n figures: A falsif i ed f ollower count can falsely induce real people to follow someone they might otherwise ignore.

“It violates the bond of trust and accuracy” between a journalist and readers or viewers, she said. “Buying followers is misreprese­ntation. Even one purchase ( by a journalist) is wrong. It’s wrong across the board.”

Culver adds that news organizati­ons bear some responsibi­lity for this by encouragin­g and sometimes rewarding journalist­s for having large social- media followings. By doing so, news organizati­ons implicitly create the conditions for follower inflation, she said.

In the wake of the Times story, an editor at one publicatio­n frankly admitted that it had ulterior motives in cooking its follower count. Micah Uetricht, associate editor at the magazine Jacobin, said the publicatio­n bought followers to impress Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, whom Jacobin was hoping would write an article for it.

“Backstory there is pretty funny: we got the idea to have Kareem Abdul- Jabbar write for us but thought our reach might be too small for him,” Uetricht tweeted. “So we bought about a thousand followers to hit a nice round number, to try to impress his agent.”

But other publicatio­ns were caught by surprise. Among the journalist­s identified by the Times as buying followers from Devumi was Joe Concha, a reporter and columnist for the Hill newspaper in Washington. The Hill’s managing editor, Bob Cusack, said the publicatio­n wasn’t just unaware that Concha had bought about 5,000 followers in early 2017 — it was unaware that it was possible to do so.

“Now that we know about this, we’ ll prohibit it,” Cusack said. He doesn’t intend to discipline Concha, whom he said has apologized for the purchase. Concha said on Twitter that he bought the followers on the recommenda­tion of a friend, a socialmedi­a expert, “to enhance ( my) brand.” He seemed to dismiss the value of the practice: “Net- net: nobody cares if you have 47k or 42k followers.”

In the interest of transparen­cy and a fresh start, I will be voluntaril­y deactivati­ng my Twitter account and launching a new account. —Chicago Sun-Times movie critic richard roeper

 ?? TIMOTHY HIATT / GETTY IMAGES ?? The Chicago Sun-Times suspended movie critic Richard Roeper after a report that he was among dozens who bought Twitter followers. Roeper, who has been reinstated, acknowledg­ed the purchases “to build my brand.”
TIMOTHY HIATT / GETTY IMAGES The Chicago Sun-Times suspended movie critic Richard Roeper after a report that he was among dozens who bought Twitter followers. Roeper, who has been reinstated, acknowledg­ed the purchases “to build my brand.”

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