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Computational Propaganda - Political Parties, Politicians, and Political Manipulation on Social Media (Hardcover)
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Computational Propaganda - Political Parties, Politicians, and Political Manipulation on Social Media (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Digital Politics
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Social media platforms do not just circulate political ideas, they
support manipulative disinformation campaigns. While some of these
disinformation campaigns are carried out directly by individuals,
most are waged by software, commonly known as bots, programmed to
perform simple, repetitive, robotic tasks. Some social media bots
collect and distribute legitimate information, while others
communicate with and harass people, manipulate trending algorithms,
and inundate systems with spam. Campaigns made up of bots, fake
accounts, and trolls can be coordinated by one person, or a small
group of people, to give the illusion of large-scale consensus.
Some political regimes use political bots to silence opponents and
to push official state messaging, to sway the vote during
elections, and to defame critics, human rights defenders, civil
society groups, and journalists. This book argues that such
automation and platform manipulation, amounts to a new political
communications mechanism that Samuel Woolley and Philip N. Noward
call "computational propaganda." This differs from older styles of
propaganda in that it uses algorithms, automation, and human
curation to purposefully distribute misleading information over
social media networks while it actively learns from and mimicks
real people so as to manipulate public opinion across a diverse
range of platforms and device networks. This book includes cases of
computational propaganda from nine countries (both democratic and
authoritarian) and four continents (North and South America,
Europe, and Asia), covering propaganda efforts over a wide array of
social media platforms and usage in different types of political
processes (elections, referenda, and during political crises).
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