Faking the war: fake posts on Turkish social media during the Russia-Ukraine war

被引:0
|
作者
Ulusan, Oshan [1 ]
Ozejder, Ibrahim [1 ]
机构
[1] Near East Univ, Dept Journalism, Nicosia, Mersin, Turkiye
来源
关键词
NEWS; POLARIZATION;
D O I
10.1057/s41599-024-03409-3
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
This study aims to analyze the fake posts circulated on Turkish social media during the Russia-Ukraine war. With advancing technology, social media platforms have a profound impact on the way we perceive and interpret events and make us question the accuracy of information generated about international events such as wars. While the Russia-Ukraine war constitutes an important turning point in international relations, the reflection of these events on social media is also seen in fake posts. In this context, the main purpose of this study is to identify the common themes of fake social media posts and to reveal the general context of these posts on social media. In addition, the study aims to analyze the fake content circulating on Turkish social media and to reveal the emerging polarized discourses through the identified themes. The research revolves around five main themes that feed polarization: war reporting, ideological misrepresentation, humor, hate speech, and conspiracy theories. The findings show that fake content is particularly concentrated around ideological polarization and antagonisms. It was also found that misinformation and decontextualized humor blurred the true context of the war and that fake content combined with hate speech and conspiracy theories distorted the context of the war.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The Russia-Ukraine War in Chinese Social Media: LLM Analysis Yields a Bias Toward Neutrality
    Rogers, Richard
    Zhang, Xiaoke
    SOCIAL MEDIA + SOCIETY, 2024, 10 (02):
  • [22] The influence of the mass media on delusions: The Russia-Ukraine war as a delusional topic
    Cegla-Schvartzman, Fanny
    Llaguno, Marina
    Baca-Garcia, Enrique
    Ovejero, Santiago
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 69 (02) : 512 - 513
  • [23] Social Media Analytics on Russia-Ukraine Cyber War with Natural Language Processing: Perspectives and Challenges
    Sufi, Fahim
    INFORMATION, 2023, 14 (09)
  • [24] The middle tier of states and the Russia-Ukraine war
    Wu, Zhengyu
    Ding, Yuhang
    INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2024, 100 (06) : 2583 - 2598
  • [25] The Russia-Ukraine war and global trade reallocations
    Steinbach, Sandro
    ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2023, 226
  • [26] Coverage of the Russia-Ukraine War by Television News
    Nordenstreng, Kaarle
    Pasti, Svetlana
    Zhang, Tao
    Jain, Savyasaachi
    Bobba, Giuliano
    Wolgast, Henry
    Hyzen, Aaron
    Guazina, Liziane
    Patnaik, Suchitra
    Ndlovu, Musawenkosi
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2023, 17 : 6857 - 6873
  • [27] A Japanese Initiative for Peace in the Russia-Ukraine War
    McCormack, Gavan
    Selden, Mark
    ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL-JAPAN FOCUS, 2022, 20 (10):
  • [28] POSTER: A Cyberspace Study of the Russia-Ukraine War
    Singh, Gursimran
    Acharya, H. B.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2023 ACM ASIA CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER AND COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY, ASIA CCS 2023, 2023, : 1016 - 1018
  • [29] Russia-Ukraine: the noxious combination that explains the war
    Gonzalez, Hernan Olmedo
    RELACIONES INTERNACIONALES, 2023, 32 (64)
  • [30] Russia-Ukraine war and monetary policy in Nigeria
    Duke, Omolara Omotunde
    Adenuga, Adeniyi Olatunde
    Olusegun, Toyin Segun
    Odu, Ada Tony
    SCIENTIFIC AFRICAN, 2024, 23