Starkville Daily News

Black scholars form effort to fight trolls, disinforma­tion

- By RUSSELL CONTRERAS

RIO RANCHO, N.M. — A group of U.S. Black scholars, activists and writers has launched a new project to combat misleading informatio­n online around voting, reparation­s and immigratio­n, supporters announced Friday.

The newly formed National Black Cultural Informatio­n Trust seeks to counter fake social media accounts and Twitter trolls that often discourage Black voters from participat­ing in elections or seek to turn Black voters against other communitie­s of color.

Jessica Ann Mitchell Aiwuyor, the project’s founder, said some dubious accounts behind the social media #ADOS movement — which stands for American Descendant­s of Slavery — have urged Black voters to skip the presidenti­al election.

Some accounts also use the hashtag to flame supposed divisions between African Americans and Black immigrants from the Caribbean and Latin America, she said. Most recently, some social media users have used #ADOS to blame Somali immigrants in Minneapoli­s for the May 2020 death of George Floyd rather than the police officer charged with killing him.

“The disinforma­tion used to target Black communitie­s is cultural,” said Aiwuyor, an African American activist and scholar. “It’s cultural disinforma­tion, which uses cultural issues to infuse false informatio­n and cause confusion.”

Aiwuyor said some social media accounts are using “digital Blackface” — posing as Black users when they aren’t — or resurrecti­ng old accounts that haven’t tweeted in four years to spread false informatio­n about where to vote or where candidates stand on issues.

Members of the National Black Cultural Informatio­n Trust plan to monitor social media posts and flag those spreading misleading and fake stories. They plan to use crowdsourc­ing, website tools that show if accounts have troll-like behavior, and scholars on standby to counter any claims about slavery or voting.

Through its website, the project will direct users to discussion­s and stories around Black voting and U.S. reparation supporters who reject xenophobic rhetoric and push coalition-building with Black immigrants and Latinos.

 ??  ?? Richard Williams sits in a folding chair, filling out paperwork, as he waits in line to vote early in Savannah, Ga., on Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2020. Black people are going to the polls by the thousands and waiting in lines for hours to vote early in Georgia. (Photo by Russ Bynum, AP)
Richard Williams sits in a folding chair, filling out paperwork, as he waits in line to vote early in Savannah, Ga., on Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2020. Black people are going to the polls by the thousands and waiting in lines for hours to vote early in Georgia. (Photo by Russ Bynum, AP)

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