Business Standard

Understand­ing the fake news market

- DEVANGSHU DATTA Twitter: @devangshud­atta

The current spate of lynchings of suspected kidnappers is a horrifying but logical outcome of the developmen­t of efficient fake news networks. Fake news is a sophistica­ted, highly competitiv­e industry. Anybody who can build an efficient fake new network reaps some rewards, and those rewards can be huge. The content disseminat­ed doesn't really matter — it’s the speed at which that content can be propagated.

The fake news phenomenon went mainstream around the time of the 2008 United States Presidenti­al election. The leading lights of America's right wing decided that the best way to tackle the rise of Barrack Obama was to claim a) that he was a closet Muslim and b) that he was born outside the US. A lot of time and trouble went into assiduousl­y spreading those “theories". The individual who is currently the president of the US was one of those who spent years repeating those lies.

Fake news was soon establishe­d as an excellent way to mobilise certain shades of public opinion. Alongside Facebook, Twitter and instant messaging services such as WhatsApp, Signal and Telegram acted as force multiplier­s. Side by side with the generation of scurrilous nonsense, smart fake news purveyors also worked to discredit genuine news services. The logic was, if no news could be trusted, the fake news would become as credible as the truth.

The fake news industry has been substantia­lly aided in its efforts by the bubble effect that characteri­ses social media. Social media creates "opinionbub­bles". People gravitate to online companions whose opinions are palatable. They consume only the news and other content that they enjoy. This creates and reinforces opinion bubbles.

These bubbles enable social media users to obliterate the opinions they find unpalatabl­e from their consciousn­ess. Going by surveys and polls, few people can distinguis­h between the true and fake news or even tell the difference between fact and opinion. The bubbles became more impenetrab­le over time as more and more people shift to social media platforms for their primary news consumptio­n.

The social media phenomenon has also created a new, more thick-skinned breed of political operators. In earlier eras, politician­s were somewhat circumspec­t when they lied in public. If one was caught lying publicly, a politician could suffer some erosion of credibilit­y within his or her power base. In the social media era of today, it doesn't matter because the bubble prevents the power base from learning that their favoured politician has lied. As a result, the lies have become more and more blatant because the social media-savvy political operators don't care if they are caught. At worst, a lie will just be written off as just another jumla (or a political gimmick).

In this era, when political parties invest capital in creating, enabling and empowering fake news networks, it also behoves the wannabe "influencer­s" to demonstrat­e an ability to disseminat­e fake news efficientl­y. The rewards for a fake news influencer can range from low-grade pay-per-tweet revenue to whatever they can extract from proximity to the folks in power.

As such, it makes sense for a wannabe influencer to demonstrat­e the power of his or her fake news network by trending some nonsense. This could be harmless nonsense like "the sky is green" to toxic gossip like "this wellknown TV anchor is married to that well-known economist " to vicious stuff like "your next door neighbour secretly eats beef " or the truly insane rumours like, “the chap in the green shirt is a baby lifter". The influencer's ability to make the rumour go viral is the ultimate proof that the influencer is worth deploying. What does it matter if somebody is lynched? Indeed, perverse as it may be, that might increase the influencer's market value.

There are no easy ways to reverse this rot. Trying to do so involves using the same tools that fake news networks deploy, and also learning how to penetrate social media bubbles with counterpro­paganda. Of course, there would be rewards for somebody who figured out how to do this efficientl­y. So there are sound commercial reasons to hope for the developmen­t of “anti-fake news networks". It will be instructiv­e to count the bodies in the next phase of this war.

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