Daily Camera (Boulder)

Lifting COVID misinforma­tion ban was dangerous move by Twitter

- By Anjana Susarla

Twitter’s decision to no longer enforce its COVID-19 misinforma­tion policy, quietly posted on the site’s rules page and listed as effective Nov. 23, 2022, has researcher­s and experts in public health seriously concerned about the possible repercussi­ons.

Health misinforma­tion is not new. A classic case is the misinforma­tion about a purported but now disproven link between autism and the MMR vaccine based on a discredite­d study published in 1998. Such misinforma­tion has severe consequenc­es for public health. Countries that had stronger anti-vaccine movements against diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP) vaccines faced a higher incidence of pertussis in the late-20th century, for example.

As a researcher who studies social media, I believe that reducing content moderation is a significan­t step in the wrong direction, especially in light of the uphill battle social media platforms face in combating misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion. And the stakes are especially high in combating medical misinforma­tion. There are three key difference­s between earlier forms of misinforma­tion and misinforma­tion spread on social media.

First, social media enables misinforma­tion to spread at a much greater scale, speed and scope.

Second, content that is sensationa­l and likely to trigger emotions is more likely to go viral on social media, making falsehoods easier to spread than the truth.

Third, digital platforms such as Twitter play a gatekeepin­g role in the way they aggregate, curate and amplify content. This means that misinforma­tion on emotionall­y triggering topics such as vaccines can readily gain attention.

The spread of misinforma­tion during the pandemic has been dubbed an infodemic by the World Health Organizati­on. There is considerab­le evidence that Covid-19-related misinforma­tion on social media reduces vaccine uptake. Public health experts have cautioned that misinforma­tion on social media seriously hampers progress toward herd immunity, weakening society’s ability to deal with new COVID-19 variants.

Misinforma­tion on social media fuels public doubts about vaccine safety. Studies show that COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy is driven by a misunderst­anding of herd immunity and beliefs in conspiracy theories.

The social media platforms’ content moderation policies and stances towards misinforma­tion are crucial for combating misinforma­tion. In the absence of strong content moderation policies on Twitter, algorithmi­c content curation and recommenda­tion are likely to boost the spread of misinforma­tion by increasing echo chamber effects, for example, exacerbati­ng partisan difference­s in exposure to content.

Algorithmi­c bias in recommenda­tion systems could also further accentuate global healthcare disparitie­s and racial disparitie­s in vaccine uptake. There is evidence that some less-regulated platforms such as Gab may amplify the impact of unreliable sources and increase COVID-19 misinforma­tion. There is also evidence that the misinforma­tion ecosystem can lure people who are on social media platforms that invest in content moderation to accept misinforma­tion that originates on less moderated platforms.

The danger then is that not only will there be greater anti-vaccine discourse on Twitter, but that such toxic speech can spill over into other online platforms that may be investing in combating medical misinforma­tion.

The Kaiser Family Foundation COVID-19 vaccine monitor reveals that public trust for COVID-19 informatio­n from authoritat­ive sources such as government­s has fallen significan­tly, with serious consequenc­es for public health. For example, the share of Republican­s who said they trust the Food and Drug Administra­tion fell from 62% to 43% from December 2020 to October 2022.

In 2021, a U.S. Surgeon General’s advisory identified that social media platforms’ content moderation policies need to:

• pay attention to the design of recommenda­tion algorithms;

• prioritize early detection of misinforma­tion;

• and amplify informatio­n from credible sources of online health informatio­n.

These priorities require partnershi­ps between healthcare organizati­ons and social media platforms to develop best practice guidelines to address healthcare misinforma­tion. Developing and enforcing effective content moderation policies takes planning and resources.

In light of what researcher­s know about COVID-19 misinforma­tion on Twitter, I believe that the announceme­nt that the company will no longer ban Covid-19-related misinforma­tion is troubling, to say the least.

Anjana Susarla is a professor of Informatio­n Systems at Michigan State University.

 ?? PHOTOS BY GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ingrid Yang, left, and Kelly Bruno, both of San Diego, take a photo in front of lava erupting from Hawaii’s Mauna Loa volcano Wednesday near Hilo, Hawaii.
PHOTOS BY GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ingrid Yang, left, and Kelly Bruno, both of San Diego, take a photo in front of lava erupting from Hawaii’s Mauna Loa volcano Wednesday near Hilo, Hawaii.

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