The Guardian (USA)

Teens much more likely to believe online conspiracy claims than adults – US study

- Kari Paul in San Francisco

Teenagers are significan­tly more likely to believe online conspiracy theories than older generation­s, a new study has shown, underscori­ng the broad impacts of gen Z’s relationsh­ip with social media.

Findings from Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), a non-profit that fights misinforma­tion, showed that 60% of 13-17-year-old Americans surveyed agreed with four or more harmful conspiracy statements – compared with just 49% of adults. For teens who spend four or more hours a day on any single social media platform, the figure was as high as 69%.

“There’s a prejudice towards believing that youth will save us from the ills created by the former generation­s, but when it comes to misinforma­tion, there are no future generation­s to save us from the damage that we’ve caused,” said Imran Ahmed, CEO of CCDH.

“This should be a clarion call – very simply, if these young people hold these beliefs in future years of their life, our democracy and the values that underpin it are under an almost impossible strain,” he added.

The study polled more than 1,000 adults and 1,000 teenagers aged 13-17 about their ideas on social media and its impact. It also asked respondent­s to state whether they agreed with damaging statements from several categories of misinforma­tion, including anti-vaccine statements, antisemiti­sm and Covid-19 misinforma­tion.

The report is just the latest to call attention to the damages of social media affecting young people. There has been a growing understand­ing of the negative mental health implicatio­ns of social media. But Ahmed said the CCDH study has made clear that social media’s impact goes beyond individual mental health and creates public health issues for society at large in the forms of misinforma­tion and hate speech.

It comes as younger generation­s are increasing­ly relying on social media for news and online search. Recent data from Google found that 40% of Gen Z now prefers platforms like TikTok and Instagram to traditiona­l search engines. A 2022 study found 50% of Gen Z respondent­s used social media to access news on a daily basis, and only 5% read newspapers.

These trends are being exacerbate­d by the rise of AI-powered chatbots and search engines like ChatGPT, raising new concerns, said Ioana Literat, an associate professor of communicat­ion studying social media at Teachers College, Columbia University.

“We’re just starting to see the beginnings of the intersecti­on AI and fake news, and conspiracy theories on social media will play a really big role in that,” she said. “With the rise of AI, and how easy it is to create manipulate­d media using generative AI, I really worry that the statistics will increase.”

Experts are particular­ly concerned the proliferat­ion of generative AI has the potential to exponentia­lly increase the scale of misinforma­tion and flood the informatio­n ecosystem with harmful content.

Ironically, the younger generation is also more aware of the dangers online media presents, with 83% of 13 to 17year-olds agreeing that online harms have offline consequenc­es compared with just 68% of adults. The question, asthe report poses, is how to remedy the issue.

The report introduces a framework created by the CCDH for a path to remedy these growing risks, which the organizati­on developed following a global summit on online harms in 2022 that included lawmakers from the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Called the “Star” framework for legislativ­e reform, it focuses on four fundamenta­l principles: Safety by Design, Transparen­cy, Accountabi­lity, and Responsibi­lity.

The survey found 42% of respondent­s supported the framework, with more that 70% agreeing with certain components of it, including that products should be transparen­t and safe by design.

“It’s really clear that the American public understand that online harms have offline impact, and that the social media companies are in part responsibl­e because of the way their algorithms work to amplify hate and disinforma­tion,” Ahmed said. “This report puts the ball back in the court of legislator­s and says, ‘What are you going to do?’ because the people want change, and it’s clear they know why we need it.”

fully change the outcome of the election in favor of Trump,” she says.

While she goes on to list all of the complex crimes Trump and allies committed, many of the paragraphs in the indictment end the same way, reminding the public that each action was “an overt act in furtheranc­e of the conspiracy”.

 ?? Photograph: Yui Mok/PA ?? Recent data from Google found that 40% of Gen Z now prefers platforms like TikTok and Instagram to traditiona­l search engines.
Photograph: Yui Mok/PA Recent data from Google found that 40% of Gen Z now prefers platforms like TikTok and Instagram to traditiona­l search engines.

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