Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Sliver of Twitter spread bulk of false news in 2016

Study: Older people, conservati­ves often shared election lies

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON — A tiny fraction of Twitter users spread the vast majority of fake news in 2016, with conservati­ves and older people sharing misinforma­tion more, a new study finds.

Scientists examined more than 16,000 U.S. Twitter accounts and found that 16 of them — less than one-tenth of 1 percent — tweeted out nearly 80 percent of the misinforma­tion masqueradi­ng as news, according to a study in the journal Science.

About 99 percent of the Twitter users spread virtually no fake informatio­n in the most heated part of the election year, said study co-author David Lazer, a Northeaste­rn University political and computer science professor.

Spreading fake informatio­n “is taking place in a very seamy, but small, corner of Twitter,” Lazer said.

Lazer said misinforma­tion “super sharers” flood Twitter: an average of 308 pieces of fakery each between Aug. 1 and Dec. 6 in 2016.

And it’s not just few people spreading it, but few people reading it, Lazer said.

“The vast majority of people are exposed to very little fake news despite the fact that there’s a concerted effort to push it into the system,” Lazer said.

The researcher­s found the 16,442 accounts they analyzed by starting with a random pool of voter records, matching names to Twitter users and then screening out accounts that appeared to not be controlled by real people.

Their conclusion­s are similar to a study earlier this month that looked at the spread of false informatio­n on Facebook. It also found that few people shared fakery, but those who did were more likely to be over 65 and conservati­ves.

That makes this study more believable because two groups of researcher­s using different social media platforms, measuring political affiliatio­n differentl­y and with different panels of users came to the same conclusion, said Yonchai Benkler, co-director of Harvard Law School’s center on the internet and society.

He wasn’t part of either study but praised them, saying they should reduce misguided post-election panic about how “out-ofcontrol technologi­cal processes had rendered us as a society incapable of telling truth from fiction.”

Experts say a recent showdown between Kentucky Catholic school students and a Native American elder at the Lincoln Memorial seemed to be stoked by a single now-shut down Twitter account. Lazer said the account fit some characteri­stics of super sharers from his study, but it was more left-leaning, which didn’t match the study.

Unlike the earlier Facebook study, Lazer didn’t interview the people but ranked people’s politics based on what they read and shared on Twitter.

The researcher­s used several different sources of domains for false informatio­n masqueradi­ng as news — not individual stories but overall sites — from lists compiled by other academics and BuzzFeed.

While five outside experts praised the study, Kathleen Hall Jamieson, head of the public policy center at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, found several problems, especially with how they determined fake informatio­n sites.

Lazer’s team found that among people they categorize­d as left-leaning and centrists, fewer than 5 percent shared any fake informatio­n.

Among those they determined were right-leaning, 11 percent of accounts shared misinforma­tion masqueradi­ng as news. For those on the extreme right, it was 21 percent.

This study shows “most of us aren’t too bad at circulatin­g informatio­n, but some of us are determined propagandi­sts who are trying to manipulate the public sphere,” said Texas A&M University’s Jennifer Mercieca, a historian of political rhetoric who wasn’t part of the study.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP 2017 ?? Spreading fake news “is taking place in a very seamy ... corner of Twitter,” said study co-author David Lazer.
MATT ROURKE/AP 2017 Spreading fake news “is taking place in a very seamy ... corner of Twitter,” said study co-author David Lazer.

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