The Oklahoman

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 fl ame supposed di vi s i ons 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 i s cultural,” said Aiwuyor, an African American activist and scholar. “It's cultural disinforma­tion, which uses cultural issues to inf use 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 s pr e a di ng misl e a di ng a nd fake stories. They plan to use crowdsourc­ing, website tools that show i f accounts have troll-like behavior, and scholars on standby to counter any claims about slavery or voting.

Through i ts 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.

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