- cross-posted to:
- worldnews@lemmy.ml
- technology@lemmy.ml
NaoPb ( @NaoPb@beehaw.org ) 36•2 years agoBut they do fuel polarization in general. I’m sure of it.
🐝bownage [they/he] ( @bownage@beehaw.org ) 50•2 years agoActually one of the conclusions from both the Science and Nature articles were that they mostly fuel far right radicalisation, not so much polarisation (which implies both ends of the political spectrum). Which I guess means leftists are generally either more capable of spotting misinformation or less inclined to act on it.
PostmodernPythia ( @PostmodernPythia@beehaw.org ) 23•2 years agoAlso, there’s not a large, well-funded far-left movement in the US fighting to radicalize people.
Erk ( @Erk@cdda.social ) 10•2 years agoAll I’ve got to offer are unionisation pamphlets and a brick.
kent_eh ( @kent_eh@lemmy.ca ) English17•2 years agoWhich I guess means leftists are generally either more capable of spotting misinformation or less inclined to act on it.
Or are less likely to be on Facebook in general.
fmstrat ( @fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com ) English7•2 years agoThe studies were percentage based, so yes, volume of posts could play an active role but likely more from an “activity” amount vs “presence”.
kingthrillgore ( @kingthrillgore@kbin.social ) 6•2 years agoSo this confirms all the studies and adages of conservative voters being less intelligent, more subject to scams and fraud, and less accepting of social norms.
whelmer ( @whelmer@beehaw.org ) 1•2 years agoYou’ve got studies suggesting that conservatives are less accepting of social norms?
nzodd ( @nzodd@beehaw.org ) 2•2 years agoDoes not literally turning traitor and attempting to overthrow the United States of America and murder the vice president count as a social norm?
whelmer ( @whelmer@beehaw.org ) 3•2 years agoBit of a non-sequitor, that would be an anecdote and not a study. But yeah I would say that those things would violate social norms. I don’t know if I would agree that conservative people are more likely to violate those norms, which is presumably your point. Take a look at the history of political assassinations in the United States or in Europe, for example. Political violence does not belong uniquely to conservatives.
I think actually pretty much by definition that conservatives are MORE concerned with social norms. That’s kind of one of the primary traits of conservativism. I think a pretty good argument could be made that the Tumpist people you’re referring to do not so much represent a conservative point of view as much as a fascist or ultra-nationalist one, which explains why they will violate certain norms pertaining to peaceful electoral processes, while strongly maintaining other norms, like heterosexual nuclear families or religious observances or certain expectations of gender expression, etc.
inconel ( @inconel@lemmy.ca ) 4•2 years agoIf it only drives the far-right, does that mean Facebook contributed shifting in window of discourse? (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overton_window)
fmstrat ( @fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com ) 2•2 years agoNot radicalization, just polarization, they are different. But overall, yes.
StarServal ( @StarServal@kbin.social ) 12•2 years agoI’ve watched someone I know who only gets their news through Facebook descend into qdom over the last 5 years. Whenever I hear about a new thing conservatives are doing or saying, I can be sure that person will be doing or saying it within a week… which then feeds right back into Facebook for others.
NaoPb ( @NaoPb@beehaw.org ) 3•2 years agoThanks for the confirmation. I bet they don’t even notice it happening. Though this could happen to anyone on any side of the spectrum. It’s sad that this is what the internet has become.
realslef ( @realslef@fedia.io ) 29•2 years ago“Yes” really isn’t complicated.
FIash Mob #5678 ( @FlashMobOfOne@beehaw.org ) 11•2 years agoYeah, doesn’t seem complicated to me at all. Their algorithm is programmed to keep people angry, engaged, and convinced 100% that their opinion is right. (no matter what that opinion is.)
Keeps people clicking on shitty ads and buying stupid crap.
fmstrat ( @fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com ) 7•2 years agoSure it is. Is it Meta’s algorithm, is it user reach, is it paid ads, is it channels, is it memes, is it leaning, is it…
Meta is participating in a pretty big study with actual researchers here. I’m no Meta fan, and this is partly for PR I’m sure, but this is a really good thing that more social media companies should do.
realslef ( @realslef@fedia.io ) 1•2 years agoThose seem like “how” or “why” questions to me. More complicated. The big one is “how do we prevent” and I bet we won’t get an honest answer from big social themselves. That’s why there should be independent public research.
fmstrat ( @fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com ) 8•2 years agoThe US 2020 Facebook and Instagram Election Study is a joint collaboration between a group of independent external academics from several institutions and Meta
Now we have the first results from this unusual collaboration, detailed in four separate papers—the first round of over a dozen studies stemming from the project.
“We also find that popular proposals to change social media algorithms did not sway political attitudes.”
“In other words, pages and groups contribute much more to segregation than users,”
Finally, the vast majority of political news that Meta’s third-party fact-checker program rated as false was viewed by conservatives, compared to liberals. That said, those false ratings amounted to a mere 0.2 percent, on average, of the full volume of content on Facebook. And political news in general accounts for just 3 percent of all posts shared on Facebook, so it’s not even remotely the most popular type of content.
This last bit is key. This means (up to) 15% of popitical posts werr misinformation (some nonpolitical), mostly viewed by conservatives. They do not state which way this information leans.
Storksforlegs ( @storksforlegs@beehaw.org ) 4•2 years agoOr maybe, we know how they get people, but how do we de-radicalize people on a wider scale?