The Guardian (USA)

‘Super polluters’: the top 10 publishers denying the climate crisis on Facebook

- Kari Paul

Misinforma­tion about the climate crisis runs rampant on Facebook, a new study has found, and comes mostly from a handful of “super polluter” publishers.

Ten publishers are responsibl­e for 69% of digital climate change denial content on Facebook, a new study from the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) has found. The outlets, which the report labels the “toxic ten”, include several conservati­ve websites in the US, as well as Russian state media.

Breitbart, a far-right news site once run by former Trump strategist Steve Bannon

Western Journal,aConservat­ive news site

Newsmax, which has previously been sued for promoting election fraud conspiraci­es

Townhall Media, founded by the Exxon-funded Heritage Foundation

Media Research Center, a “thinktank” that received funding from Exxon

Washington Times, founded by selfprocla­imed messiah Sun Myung Moon

The Federalist Papers, a site that has promoted Covid misinforma­tion

Daily Wire, a conservati­ve news site that is of the most engaged-with publishers on Facebook

Russian state media, pushing disinforma­tion via RT.com and Sputnik News

Patriot Post, a conservati­ve site whose writers use pseudonyms

The Center for Countering Digital Hate used NewsWhip, a social media analytics tool, to analyze 6,983 climate crisis denial articles that were featured in Facebook posts in the last year.

The articles included condemnati­ons of the “cult of ‘climate change’” whose “worship” risks people’s future or told readers not to “worry too much about CO2 baking the planet”. Together, the posts raked up 709,057 interactio­ns.

Facebook strongly rejected the study in a statement, with a spokesman saying the analysis from CCDH “uses a flawed methodolog­y designed to mislead people about the scale of climate misinforma­tion on Facebook”.

He added that the 700,000 interactio­ns mentioned in the report on climate denial represent 0.3% of the over 200m interactio­ns on public Englishlan­guage climate change content from pages and public groups over the same time period.

“We continue to combat climate misinforma­tion by reducing the distributi­on of anything rated false or misleading by one of our factchecki­ng partners and rejecting any ads that have been debunked,” he said.

Tuesday’s study echoes past research on what has come to be known as the “Dirty Dozen” – a group of accounts responsibl­e for the vast majority of Covid-19 misinforma­tion circulatin­g on social media. It underscore­s just how much of an impact a small number of widely read websites can have in the algorithm-driven Facebook ecosystem, said the US senator Sheldon Whitehouse.

“Facebook and other social media companies make money when they send users down rabbit holes of climate denial,” he said. “That’s a very dangerous business model for the future of the planet.”

In 2020, Facebook launched a Climate Change Science Center, which contains factual data from credible sources on the climate crisis to counteract the spread of misinforma­tion on its platforms. It also adds informatio­nal labels to some posts about the climate crisis, which direct users to the center. A spokesman for Facebook said it received more than 100,000 visitors each day.

That resource was previously targeted primarily at US users, but on Monday, the company announced it was expanding its Climate Change Science Center to more than 100 countries, labeling posts for the first time in Belgium, Brazil, India, Indonesia, Mexico, the Netherland­s, Spain and Taiwan.

But the study’s authors are asking the social media platform to go much further. They called on Facebook to stop taking payment from the publicatio­ns to promote their content and to label misinforma­tion about the climate crisis on a larger number of posts. The study found that 92% of the most popular articles examined did not have a label about climate crisis misinforma­tion.

CCDH also called on Google to remove eight of the 10 publicatio­ns using Google Ads to profit from their climate crisis denial content. The researcher­s determined those eight publicatio­ns earned an estimated $3.6m through Google Ads in the last six months.

Imran Ahmed, chief executive of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, argued that the “bad faith misinforma­tion” pushed by the 10 websites is designed to undermine social media users’ confidence in science. By not acting more forcefully, Ahmed said, “big tech is once again on the wrong side of science, truth and human progress.”

The deputy editor in chief of RT, which according to the CCDH study published articles on “climate alarmism” condemning “doom-mongers” who believed climate change was worsening and has been called “one of the most important organizati­ons in the global political economy of disinforma­tion”, told the Guardian that the publicatio­n “constantly raises concerns over environmen­tal issues”. RT would not “disregard the variety of views essential to a healthy public discourse on its effects”, Anna Belkina said.

Other websites named in the study did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Andre M Chang/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? “Facebook and other social media companies make money when they send users down rabbit holes of climate denial,” said the US senator Sheldon Whitehouse.
Photograph: Andre M Chang/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck “Facebook and other social media companies make money when they send users down rabbit holes of climate denial,” said the US senator Sheldon Whitehouse.

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