FRI 29 - 3 - 2024
 
Date: Jan 22, 2016
Source: The Daily Star
With social networks come many lies
Fareed Zakaria

Thomas Jefferson often argued that an educated public was crucial for the survival of self-government. We now live in an age in which education takes place mostly through new platforms. Social networks – Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and so on – are the main mechanisms by which people receive and share facts, ideas and opinions. But what if these new technologies encourage misinformation, rumors and lies? In a comprehensive new study of Facebook – analyzing posts made between 2010 and 2014 – a group of scholars found that people mainly share information that confirms their prejudices, paying little attention to facts and veracity. (Hat tip to Cass Sunstein, the leading expert on this topic). The result, they conclude, is the “proliferation of biased narratives fomented by unsubstantiated rumors, mistrust and paranoia.” The authors specifically studied trolling – the creation of highly provocative, often false information, with the hope of spreading it widely. They write that “many mechanisms cause false information to gain acceptance, which in turn cause false beliefs that, once adopted, are highly resistant to correction.”

As it happens, in recent weeks I was the target of a trolling campaign and saw exactly how it works. It started when an obscure website published a post titled, “CNN host Fareed Zakaria calls for jihad rape of white women.” The story claimed that in my “private blog” I had urged the use of American women as “sex slaves” to depopulate the white race. The posting further claimed that on my Twitter account, I had written the following line: “Every death of a white person brings tears of joy to my eyes.”

Disgusting. So much so that the item would collapse of its own weightlessness, right? Wrong. Here is what happened next. Hundreds of people began linking to it, tweeting and retweeting it, adding their comments, which are too vulgar or racist to repeat. A few ultra-right-wing websites reprinted the story as fact. With each new cycle, the levels of hysteria rose, and people started demanding that I be fired, deported or killed. For a few days the digital intimidation veered out into the real world. Some people called my house late one night and woke up and threatened my daughters, who are 7 and 12.

It would have taken a minute to click on the link and see that the original post was on a fake news site, one that claims to be satirical (though not very prominently). It would have taken simple common sense to realize the absurdity of the charge. But none of this mattered. The people spreading this story were not interested in the facts; they were interested in feeding prejudice. The original story was cleverly written to provide conspiracy theorists with enough ammunition to ignore evidence. It claimed that I took down the post after a few hours when I realized it “receive[d] negative attention.” So, when the occasional debunker would point out that there was no evidence of the post anywhere, it made little difference. When confronted with evidence that the story was utterly false, it only convinced many that there was a conspiracy and cover-up.

In my own experience, the conversation on Facebook is somewhat more civil, because people generally have to reveal their actual identities. But on Twitter and in other places – the comments section of the Washington Post – people can be anonymous or have pseudonyms. And that is where bile and venom flow freely. The Post’s Dana Milbank recently quoted a tweet about a column of his that said, “Let’s not mince words: Milbank is an anti-white parasite and a bigoted kike supremacist.” The comments about me were often nastier.

Elizabeth Kolbert, writing in the New Yorker, recalled an experiment performed by two psychologists in 1970. They divided students into two groups based on their answers to a questionnaire: high prejudice and low prejudice. Each group was told to discuss controversial issues like school busing and integrated housing. Then the questions were asked again. “The surveys revealed a striking pattern,” Kolbert notes. “Simply by talking to one another, the bigoted students had become more bigoted and the tolerant more tolerant.” This “group polarization” is now taking place at hyper speed, around the world. It is how radicalization happens and extremism spreads.

I love social media. But somehow we have to help create better mechanisms in it to distinguish between fact and falsehood. No matter how passionate people are, no matter how cleverly they can blog or tweet or troll, no matter how viral things get, lies are still lies.

Fareed Zakaria is published weekly by THE DAILY STAR.


 
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on January 18, 2016, on page 7.

The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Arab Network for the Study of Democracy
 
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