A Storm of Tweets: Social Media Manipulation During the Gulf Crisis

被引:11
|
作者
Leber, Andrew [1 ]
Abrahams, Alexei [2 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Dept Govt, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[2] Univ Toronto, Munk Sch Global Affairs & Publ Policy, Citizen Lab, Toronto, ON, Canada
关键词
authoritarianism; social media; propaganda; censorship;
D O I
10.1017/rms.2019.45
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
Social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter were heralded circa 2009-2011 as 'liberation technology' that would facilitate mass mobilization against Middle Eastern authoritarians. In this article, however, we present evidence from the ongoing Gulf Crisis (2017-present) that regimes can now exploit Twitter as an outlet for political propaganda. Drawing in part on novel data collected by the authors, we present strong evidence of state actors manipulating discourse on Twitter through direct intervention, offline coercion or co-optation of existing social-media "influencers," and the mass production of online statements via automated "bot" accounts. We further present evidence that this manipulation is aimed at securing organic participation from supportive publics.
引用
收藏
页码:241 / 258
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] #Blockade: Social Media and the Gulf Diplomatic Crisis
    Mitchell, Jocelyn Sage
    REVIEW OF MIDDLE EAST STUDIES, 2019, 53 (02) : 200 - 220
  • [2] Yaks versus Tweets: Sentiment Discrepancy During a Social Crisis
    Koohikamali, Mehrdad
    Gerhart, Natalie
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 51ST ANNUAL HAWAII INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES (HICSS), 2018, : 1789 - 1796
  • [3] THE LANGUAGE OF MANIPULATION IN THE MEDIA DISCOURSE DURING THE CORONA CRISIS
    Miletic, Nikolina
    Peric, Marija
    FLUMINENSIA, 2022, 34 (01): : 143 - 161
  • [4] Silence of the Tweets: incorporating social media activity drop-offs into crisis detection
    Samuels, Rachel
    Taylor, John E.
    Mohammadi, Neda
    NATURAL HAZARDS, 2020, 103 (01) : 1455 - 1477
  • [5] Silence of the Tweets: incorporating social media activity drop-offs into crisis detection
    Rachel Samuels
    John E. Taylor
    Neda Mohammadi
    Natural Hazards, 2020, 103 : 1455 - 1477
  • [6] Crisis Communications in the Age of Social Media: A Network Analysis of Zika-Related Tweets
    Hagen, Loni
    Keller, Thomas
    Neely, Stephen
    DePaula, Nic
    Robert-Cooperman, Claudia
    SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 2018, 36 (05) : 523 - 541
  • [7] CRISIS COMMUNICATION MANAGEMENT, SOCIAL MEDIA, AND LEADERSHIP: A STUDY ON TWEETS BY BARACK OBAMA AND HILLARY
    Aslan, Pinar
    ISTANBUL UNIVERSITESI ILETISIM FAKULTESI DERGISI, 2015, (49): : 15 - 30
  • [8] Sentiment Analysis of Yaks and Tweets during the Concerned Student 1950 Social Crisis
    Gerhart, Natalie
    Koohikamali, Mehrdad
    AMCIS 2017 PROCEEDINGS, 2017,
  • [9] COMMUNITY INTELLIGENCE AND SOCIAL MEDIA SERVICES: A RUMOR THEORETIC ANALYSIS OF TWEETS DURING SOCIAL CRISES
    Oh, Onook
    Agrawal, Manish
    Rao, H. Raghav
    MIS QUARTERLY, 2013, 37 (02) : 407 - U120
  • [10] The dynamic role of social media during Hurricane #Sandy: An introduction of the STREMII model to weather the storm of the crisis life cycle
    Stewart, Margaret C.
    Wilson, B. Gail
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2016, 54 : 639 - 646