USA TODAY International Edition

Social media plan in Chauvin trial dropped

City aimed to pay influencers to control misinforma­tion

- Terry Collins

The plan seemed simple enough: The City of Minneapoli­s was going to enlist the help of several key community influencers with the hopes of handling misinforma­tion on social media and easing possible tensions as the murder trial that sparked a racial reckoning worldwide gets underway. And for that, the city would pay them each $ 2,000.

With jury selection set to start Monday in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapoli­s police officer facing murder charges in the death of George Floyd, city officials, nervous about the spread of misinforma­tion that could lead to uprisings and violence, hoped to employ the power and reach of social media as a best defense.

The community response was swift – and the retraction came as fast as the criticism.

Minneapoli­s’ strategy was “a terrible execution” of a good idea, said Karen North, a professor at the University of Southern California’s digital social media program.

“I agree with the premise, their idea is absolutely correct because false informatio­n spreads very quickly, especially in the digital world, and inflammatory informatio­n spreads even faster than the sedate boring truth,” North said. “But Minneapoli­s did it in a way that makes it look like propaganda.”

Andrea Jenkins, a Minneapoli­s council member whose ward is where Floyd died, believes in the reach and role of social media, while acknowledg­ing using the term “social media influencers” was “a poor choice of words.”

“It was never about disseminat­ing any propaganda,” Jenkins said. “It is a reality that social media is a dominant part of our society, so it’s not really clear to me why the city shouldn’t be communicat­ing in this manner.”

This debate over using technology comes as Minneapoli­s is feverishly taking precaution­s against potential uprisings around the trial. Chauvin has pleaded not guilty to second- degree murder. Opening arguments in the closely watched trial are set to begin March 29.

Floyd, who was Black, was killed May 25 after Chauvin, who’s white, was seen on a widely circulated smartphone video pinning his knee against a handcuffed Floyd’s neck for more than 9 minutes as Floyd said he couldn’t breathe. Chauvin and three other officers seen in the video were fired.

The incident sparked unrest against racial inequities and police brutality.

The protests, conversati­ons and calls for making authoritie­s more accountabl­e reignited the hashtag # BlackLives­Matter into a worldwide call for justice. As a result, the organizati­on was nominated for the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize.

Minneapoli­s’ strategy was “a terrible execution” of a good idea. Karen North University of Southern California professor

Minneapoli­s’ social media plan

Last month, the Minneapoli­s City Council approved nearly $ 1.2 million in funding with several community organizati­ons throughout the trials as part of its Joint Informatio­n System program created after the outrage and destructio­n over Floyd’s death. The “social media influencers” were part of a larger community strategy.

The city planned to hire six “influencers” from the Black, Somali/ East African, Native American, Hmong and Hispanic communitie­s who have a “large social media presence” to share “city generated and approved messages” on their Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and other social media accounts about road and building closures, as well as dismissing any misinforma­tion.

And each influencer would have been paid $ 2,000 under the plan, Minneapoli­s officials said.

“Our recommenda­tions were to seek out additional ways to get that type of informatio­n to all residents,” said the email that Minneapoli­s city officials sent to its elected leaders last Sunday. “We have also heard from our communitie­s that if we ask them to assist with sharing informatio­n, we should honor their work and compensate them.”

And, during a briefing that aired online March 1, Minneapoli­s’ neighborho­od and community relations director David Rubedor echoed a similar sentiment with the goal of “sharing timely and accurate informatio­n” and build in two- way communicat­ion channels” and understand­ing what is happening in real- time with the community.

Those people would include local community leaders, organizati­ons and groups that are “on the ground,” according to the city.

But North, the USC professor, said the Minneapoli­s social media influencers in particular, who she believes are more like community leaders and liaisons, shouldn’t have sought payment for their services. She said they aren’t social media influencers similar to Jake and Logan Paul and host of others who make a living off shilling brands.

North said what these “influencers” may have in common are what she calls “The 3 R’s: reach, resonance, and relevance.” She describes reach as a person with an ability to “reach out to a targeted audience and demographi­c;” Resonance as “a way to persuasive enough with their thoughts and opinions that can resonate, otherwise why bother.”

And relevance, as “someone who is very familiar with the topic, that’s timely.”

North said officials wanted to get out informatio­n to as many as people as possible from different background­s who may not get their informatio­n from traditiona­l news sources.

“But when you pay somebody to do it, you automatica­lly raise suspicion about the viability and authentici­ty of the informatio­n,” she said.

The impact of social media

For more than a decade, technology and social media in particular have played a monumental role, from the Arab Spring protests, to Occupy Wall Street, to the Black Lives Matter and the # MeToo movements. Add recent uprisings in China and Lebanon, and other social movements around the world, and there appears to be no end in sight.

Domestical­ly, about 23% of adult social media users in the United States said they changed their views about a political or social issue because of something they saw on social media in the past year, according to a Pew Research Center survey conducted in July.

And seeing something on social media have both positive and negative impacts, North said. For example, she said that as social media was used to organize mass protests and demonstrat­ions following Floyd’s death, the medium also was likely used to plan the deadly insurrecti­on at the U. S. Capitol two months ago.

“What most of us don’t see is that last stage of organizing, and it’s happening on social media and often hidden away on anonymous and encrypted platforms,” North said. “This is so powerful enough as an emerging trend we’re not moving away from.”

And Minneapoli­s was aiming to harness that power. However, with being so keen on having some degree of control of the public conversati­on, the city started losing that control by hiring “influencers,” said Saif Shahin, an assistant professor at American University. Shahin says that while he takes the city officials’ reasoning at face value, he says the perception still makes them look bad.

“It’s a very delicate situation, and the very fact that they were trying to hire influencers – that word itself is loaded – implies they were trying to influence public sentiment,” said Shahin, who focuses on the relationsh­ip between social media and politics. “The fact that they decided to do this backfired, and that’s the exact opposite of what they wanted.”

During a briefing that aired online March 1, Minneapoli­s’ neighborho­od and community relations director David Rubedor said the goal was “sharing timely and accurate informatio­n” and building “two- way communicat­ion channels” in real time.

Jenkins said that for her, it’s simply a matter of getting the truth out. Her concerns about the spread of false informatio­n stem from an incident last August that led to unrest in downtown Minneapoli­s. It was sparked by rumors on social media that police had killed a man who was a suspect in a homicide. He had in fact fatally shot himself to apparently avoid being arrested.

The incidentle­d to widespread looting in the area.

“There is a huge distrust of the city, of the police. I’m not denying that and people are rightfully questionin­g every move,” Jenkins said. “However, if we want to keep our city safe, we need everybody to be included in that process.”

“If we ask ( communitie­s) to assist with sharing informatio­n, we should honor their work and compensate them.” Email from Minneapoli­s officials

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Workers install security fencing at the Hennepin County Government Headquarte­rs in Minneapoli­s.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Workers install security fencing at the Hennepin County Government Headquarte­rs in Minneapoli­s.
 ??  ?? Chauvin
Chauvin
 ?? JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY ?? People occupy the intersecti­on of Chicago Ave and E. 38th Street before a curfew takes effect in Minneapoli­s on June 1, 2020. The intersecti­on is the location of Cup Foods and the location where George Floyd died in police custody on May 25.
JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY People occupy the intersecti­on of Chicago Ave and E. 38th Street before a curfew takes effect in Minneapoli­s on June 1, 2020. The intersecti­on is the location of Cup Foods and the location where George Floyd died in police custody on May 25.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States