USA TODAY US Edition

6-PAGE ELECTION SECTION

Alternativ­e social media platforms growing fast

- Nathan Bomey

The rise of conservati­vefriendly Parler and other social media alternativ­es in a post-Trump age, plus USA TODAY fact checks on claims found online.

America’s crisis of political segregatio­n – we increasing­ly don’t live alongside, associate with or even marry people who think differentl­y from us – is increasing­ly leading conservati­ves to congregate together on social media outlets designed specifical­ly for people who think like them.

The recent rise of Parler – as well as other social media alternativ­es that appeal primarily to conservati­ves and that got their start largely by attracting the far right – raises the specter of further political polarizati­on through digital means. Parler and others, like MeWe and Gab, are gaining momentum with a promise not to censor their users for behavior that might violate the policies of their rivals.

Parler said in its Nov. 7 “community guidelines” that it won’t decide what content will be “removed or filtered, or whose account will be removed, on the basis of the opinion expressed within the content.”

Supporters say Parler is preserving free speech and is correcting for the overreach of the mainstream social media platforms, which applied labels to or limited the reach of many of President Donald Trump’s misleading posts during the week of the election.

“Constantly jumping in and correcting things for the record and feeling like it’s one way feels inappropri­ate to me,” said Trent Read of the Salt Lake City area, who said he plans to shift from Twitter and Facebook to Parler. “If I can be a small part of sending a message to them to tell them to stay out of my business, that would be a positive thing.”

But, much like the social media site Gab, Parler has quickly attracted the extremist crowd in addition to self-proclaimed center-right conservati­ves like Read. Groups from the far-right Proud Boys, which includes large numbers of white supremacis­ts, to heavily armed anti-government militias have gathered on the site to spread conspiracy theories, racist memes and false claims of election fraud.

Yet for an electorate stricken with deep fissures on race, politics and class, the act of dividing social media loyalties into liberal and conservati­ve camps could reflect a natural next step deeper into polarized terrain.

“I think it’s inevitable that we’ll see the rise of conservati­ve, separate or distinct social media,” said Jonathan Rauch, a senior fellow and U.S. political scholar at the Brookings Institutio­n, a Washington-based think tank. “It’s only a question of where and how fast it will form and how extreme and partisan it will become.”

Parler gaining momentum

Proponents of conservati­ve alternativ­es to Facebook, Twitter and YouTube say that they are exercising their freespeech right to establish a forum for political discussion free from the moderation policies of the mainstream platforms.

Parler said it will take down only content or accounts that are being “used as a tool for crime, civil torts, or other unlawful acts,” including terrorism, child pornograph­y or copyright violations. Promoting spam also qualifies.

“People deserve better,” Parler said in a statement last week after Facebook and Twitter took action against Trump’s tweets. “They don’t need to be coddled, assigned a ‘safe space’ where they are told what they are permitted to think.”

That message seems to have struck a chord. Parler was the No. 1 free app downloaded through Apple’s App Store and Google Play on Tuesday, according to market research firm SensorTowe­r.

What’s more, Facebook users have been gathering momentum with coordinate­d plans to persuade people to leave the platform.

A public group promoting a “mass exit” off of Facebook on Nov. 13 had attracted more than 451,000 people who said they’re “going” or “interested” as of Tuesday afternoon.

“The point of this movement is to get off of these censored social media pages,” the group’s organizer posted Monday. “I encourage everyone to go on any social media site that will not censor you. No more ‘fact checkers’ or people deleting or putting us in time out.”

Parler said its membership has jumped from about 4.5 million a week ago to about 8 million. Among its users, about 500,000 were active two weeks ago, and about 4 million are active now, Parler said.

“Our growth is not attributab­le to

Parler is a social media platform that is drawing users, especially conservati­ves, who are not happy with Twitter and Facebook.

any one person or group, but rather to Parler’s efforts to earn our community’s trust, both by protecting their privacy, and being transparen­t about the way in which their content is handled on our platform,” Chief Operating Officer Jeffrey Wernick said in an emailed response to USA TODAY questions.

Salt Lake City area resident Read said his frustratio­n with the “nanny state” on Twitter and Facebook, particular­ly with their applicatio­n of warning labels to the president’s posts, was a tipping point for him.

“Hyperbole is where he lives and plays,” Read said of Trump. “It feels like they don’t believe we have the intelligen­ce to filter through hyperbole and figure out truth from error.”

Prominent politician­s and media personalit­ies have also made a point of joining the new platforms.

South Dakota’s GOP Gov. Kristi Noem announced Tuesday that she had joined MeWe, a platform billing itself as the “anti” Facebook, with no ads, targeting, political bias or news feed manipulati­on. Fox Business anchor Maria Bartiromo said after the election that she was leaving Twitter for Parler, saying Twitter had “abused power.”

Twitter declined to comment for this story, and Facebook did not respond to a request seeking comment.

Experts on political polarizati­on say it’s a natural outgrowth of our divided culture for Americans to begin choosing their social media services based on the political identity of those platforms.

“This is America in 2020,” said Josh Pasek, an expert on political communicat­ion and misinforma­tion and a professor at the University of Michigan. “We’re defriendin­g people over politics. We have an urban-rural divide. We have a racial divide. At the end of the day, what do you end up with? You end up with an increasing­ly segmented society.”

The environmen­t it fosters is conducive to confirmati­on bias, a psychologi­cal condition that describes human tendency to seek out informatio­n that reinforces our preexistin­g beliefs. That tendency is not exclusive to one particular political persuasion.

Confirmati­on bias and groupthink can be harmless in the case of fairly innocuous issues. But it can be harmful in the case of dangerous conspiracy theories like QAnon.

Backers of the extremist ideology have migrated to Parler in recent months, said Angelo Carusone, president of Media Matters for America, a watchdog group that monitors news reports and social media. Militia groups and white supremacis­ts, such as Proud Boys, have also increased their activity on alternativ­e social media services.

“A lot of the skeletons of the larger right-wing echo chamber have moved or set up shop on Parler, especially in the wake of some concerted actions by the platforms” like Facebook and Twitter to crack down on extremist content and misinforma­tion, Carusone said.

He said Parler’s reach is likely to be limited in part because it appeals almost exclusivel­y to hard-core conservati­ves, unlike Facebook and Twitter, which have a broad cross-section of users who can come into contact with misinforma­tion or misleading content.

“It’s going to give them that fervency and that ability to organize,” Carusone said. “It’s going to become a genuine echo chamber where they’re really talking to each other.”

Topics that have flourished on social media alternativ­es is include the validity of election results. Despite the absence of substantiv­e evidence of fraud, accusation­s are thriving.

“This is America in 2020. We’re defriendin­g people over politics.” Josh Pasek University of Michigan

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ??
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
 ?? AP ?? President Donald Trump has accused social media companies of favoring Joe Biden.
AP President Donald Trump has accused social media companies of favoring Joe Biden.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States