Waterloo Region Record

Pandemic is fertile ground for conspiracy theorists

Conservati­ve groups using fake COVID-19 stories as ammunition against their opponents

- ANATOLIY GRUZD AND PHILIP MAI

In the midst of a global pandemic, conspiracy theorists have found yet another way to spread dangerous disinforma­tion and misinforma­tion about COVID-19, sowing seeds of doubt about its severity and denying the very existence of the pandemic.

Since March 28, conspiracy theorists — “coronaviru­s deniers” — have been using the hashtag #FilmYourHo­spital to encourage people to visit local hospitals to take pictures and videos to prove that the COVID-19 pandemic is an elaborate hoax.

The premise for this conspiracy theory rests on the baseless assumption that if hospital parking lots and waiting rooms are empty then the pandemic must not be real or is not as severe as reported by health authoritie­s and the media.

Of course, there is a simple explanatio­n for why some hospital parking lots and waiting rooms might have been empty. As part of pandemic planning, many hospitals have banned visitors and doctors have had to postpone or cancel elective and non-urgent procedures to free up medical staff and resources. This is in keeping with expert advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other health authoritie­s.

In addition, to slow the spread of the virus and prevent cross infections with non-COVID-19 patients, the CDC also recommende­d that health-care facilities create separate intake and waiting areas for coronaviru­s patients and reserve emergency areas for emergencie­s such as heart attacks and broken arms. This empty-hospital conspiracy theory joins a parade of false, unproven and misleading claims about the virus that have been making the rounds on social media including allegation­s that 5G wireless technology somehow plays a role in the spread of the COVID-19 virus, or consuming silver particles or drinking water with lemon prevents or cures you of the virus. None of these are true.

British MP Michael Gove said at a Downing Street news conference that the conspiracy theory linking 5G technology to the spread of coronaviru­s is “dangerous nonsense,” after cellphone towers around the U.K. were attacked.

At the Ryerson University Social Media Lab, some of our research investigat­es how misinforma­tion propagates across different social media platforms. One of the first steps when examining trending topics on social media is to look for signs of social bots — social media accounts designed to act on Twitter and other platforms with some level of autonomy — and co-ordinated inauthenti­c behaviour that may include coordinate­d activities that attempt to artificial­ly manipulate conversati­ons to make them appear more popular than they are.

These two forms of social manipulati­on, when left unchecked, can skew the conversati­on, manufactur­e anger where there is none, suppress opposition or dampen debate. These tactics may undermine our ability as citizens to make decisions and reach consensus as a society.

This new conspiracy campaign against the media and public health officials, with hospitals and medical staff caught in the middle, started on March 28 with a simple tweet by a Twitter user posing a question: “#FilmYourHo­spital Can this become a thing?”

For our analysis, we collected a sample data set consisting of nearly 100,000 #FilmYourHo­spital public tweets and retweets posted by 43,000 public accounts on Twitter from March 28, the beginning of this campaign, until April 9.

Our analysis suggests that while the #FilmYourHo­spital campaign on Twitter is full of misleading and false COVID-19 claims, most of the active and influentia­l accounts behind it don’t appear to be automated. However, we did find signs of ad hoc co-ordination among conservati­ve internet personalit­ies and far-right groups attempting to take a baseless conspiracy theory and turn it into a weapon against their political opponents.

Importantl­y, we found that while much of the content came from users with limited reach, the oxygen that fuelled this conspiracy in its early days came from just a handful of prominent conservati­ve politician­s and far right political activists like @DeAnna4Con­gress, @realcandac­eo and @DonnaWR8. These power users employed the #FilmYourHo­spital hashtag to build awareness about the campaign and to encourage their followers to film what’s happening in their local hospitals. After the initial boost by a few prominent accounts, the campaign was mostly sustained by pro-Trump supporters, followed by a secondary wave of propagatio­n outside the U.S.

As part of our ongoing research on COVID-19 misinforma­tion, we developed the COVID-19 Misinforma­tion Portal that features a range of resources to inform and inoculate Canadians against false and misleading claims about the pandemic. This includes documentin­g coronaviru­s claims debunked by profession­al fact checkers, and a Twitter dashboard tracking the presence of possible bot accounts.

In normal times, outlandish conspiraci­es like this might make us shake our heads, but as COVID-19 cases continue to stalk the hallways of nursing homes in Canada and fill beds in New York hospitals, it is harder to ignore such upsetting conspiraci­es from the dark recesses of the internet.

The rise of this conspiracy from a single tweet reminds us that while the spread of misinforma­tion can be mitigated by fact-checking and directing people to credible sources of informatio­n from public health agencies, false and misleading claims that are driven by politics and supported by strong conviction­s and not science are much harder to root out.

Anatoliy Gruzd is an associate professor and Canada Research Chair in Social Media Data Stewardshi­p at Ryerson University. Philip Mai senior researcher and director of business and communicat­ions, Social Media Lab at Ryerson University. This first appeared at theconvers­ation.com.

 ?? STEFAN ROUSSEAU THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A cell tower after a fire, in Dagenham, England. Dozens of European cell towers have been destroyed in recent arson attacks that officials and wireless companies say are fuelled by groundless conspiracy theories linking new 5G mobile networks and the coronaviru­s pandemic.
STEFAN ROUSSEAU THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A cell tower after a fire, in Dagenham, England. Dozens of European cell towers have been destroyed in recent arson attacks that officials and wireless companies say are fuelled by groundless conspiracy theories linking new 5G mobile networks and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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