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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 22:52

‘Fake News’ in the 2019 Nigerian Presidential Election

Politics | Elections | Government | Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | IAMCR 2019 |

The next speaker in this entertaining IAMCR 2019 session is Adeyanju Apejoye, whose focus is on ‘fake news’ in the 2019 Nigerian presidential election. ‘Fake news’ has become a critical issue in Nigerian politics, given the highly contested nature of the campaign, the shortcomings of Nigerian mainstream media, and the increasing role of online and social media in the country.


The project examined such issues through surveys and qualitative content analysis of news stories and comments, focussing on some eleven news stories with a particular focus on a province seeking to secede from the country. Some such stories used highly …

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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 22:37

Euromyths: The Long History of Anti-EU ‘Fake News’ in the British Press

Politics | Elections | Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | IAMCR 2019 |

The next speaker at IAMCR 2019 is Imke Henkel, whose focus is on how British news coverage of EU affairs has influenced the outcome of the Brexit referendum in the longer term. She points to the Leave campaigns infamous lie that Britain was sending £350m to the EU every week, which is understood to have played an important role in campaigning, and notes that this is only the latest of a very long history of bizarre stories about purported EU regulations disadvantaging British citizens and businesses.

These stories are what can be understood as Euromyths, representing a second-order semiological system …

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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 22:20

‘Fake News’ to Undermine the Mexican Electoral Authority

Politics | Elections | Government | ‘Fake News’ | IAMCR 2019 |

The next IAMCR 2019 session is on ‘fake news’, and we start with Julio Juarez Gamiz who focusses on ‘fake news’ directed at the national electoral authority in the 2018 Mexican presidential elections.

There is substantial mistrust of electoral authorities given that, until recently, Mexico had the same party in power for some 70 years; in 1988, the system that provides vote count updates broke down altogether as it showed the opposition in the lead, and by the time it came back online the government was back in the lead. This is still seen as a marker of the worst …

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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 20:03

A Historical Perspective on Dignity

Politics | Government | IAMCR 2019 |

The first keynote at the IAMCR 2019 conference is by Javier Gomá, whose theme is human dignity. He suggests that dignity is the most revolutionary concept of the 20th century. It has become a widespread concept that animates many modern causes, from unionism through feminism to emerging new political ideologies, and is crucial to many current debates about the role and impact of new technologies, yet remains ignored by many recent philosophical works.

There has been a certain revival of interest in the concept of human dignity in recent years, however. (Argh, the wifi and thus the live translation audio …

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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 17:38

Sharing News on Social Media in Singapore

Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | IAMCR 2019 |

The next speaker at IAMCR 2019 is Edson Tandoc Jr., who begins by pointing out the continuing shift to online and social media as a critical source of news – in Singapore, some 47% of users now access news via Facebook, for instance. This also enables audiences as well as news organisations to engage in promotion, distribution, data collection, and engagement around the news.

Sharing links to the news on social media is now also a form of cultural currency, therefore. Compared to other forms of news transmission, sharing news links increases the speed and reach of the news …

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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 17:25

The Use of Instagram by German Politicians

Politics | Elections | Journalism | Social Media | IAMCR 2019 |

The next speakers at IAMCR 2019 are Thomas Eckerl and Oliver Hahn, whose interest is in the role of Instagram in political communication in Germany. The adoption of such platforms for political communication is an example of growing mediatisation in society as such, and in politics in particular, as well as a sign of the continuing shift towards more participatory media forms and from top-down to bottom-up communication over the past two decades or so.

What is the role of Instagram in Germany in this context, then, especially in the context of the 2017 federal and state elections? How do …

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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 17:11

The Role of WhatsApp in News Consumption in Spain

Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | IAMCR 2019 |

The second paper in this IAMCR 2019 session is presented by Klaus Zilles, whose focus is on the distribution of disinformation on WhatsApp. The messaging platform has been embroiled in disinformation events in a number of countries in recent times, and has now begun to fund several research projects into the phenomenon, including the present study in Spain.

Spanish users are relatively active on the platform, spending more than one hour per day on average on WhatsApp. They are also increasingly using it to share the news, shifting away from more open platforms like Facebook and Twitter to …

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Snurb — Monday 8 July 2019 16:54

The Importance of Content Curators in Distribution Taiwanese News on Facebook

Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Facebook | IAMCR 2019 |

For the last stage of my travels I’ve arrived at the IAMCR 2019 conference in Madrid, where I’m starting with a session of journalism. The first presenter is Yu-Peng Lin, whose focus is the role of Facebook in news production and distribution in Taiwan.

Online news reading is now very prevalent in Taiwan, and this has affected journalistic practices. Facebook is the leading social media platform there, and some 53% of users access the news through this platform. The embrace of the platform by news organisations has led especially to the rise of a new role of content curators, who …

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Snurb — Tuesday 25 June 2019 02:36

Some Provocations to Social Media Researchers after the Cambridge Analytica Moment

Social Media | Facebook | Twitter | AoIR Flashpoint Symposium 2019 |

We finish the sessions at the 2019 AoIR Flashpoint Symposium with our second keynote, by Rebekah Tromble. She begins provocatively by suggesting that we as digital media researchers need to get over ourselves, so this should be interesting.

Many of the current problems for digital media research stem from the Cambridge Analytica scandal, which resulted in the shutdown of many of the primary sources of social media research data – especially the Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) of leading platforms. Most applications for API access to Facebook are now denied, for instance; the Instagram platform API was scheduled for shutdown even …

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Snurb — Tuesday 25 June 2019 01:08

Competing Narratives of Networked Citizenship in Russia

Social Media | AoIR Flashpoint Symposium 2019 |

The final speaker in this 2019 AoIR Flashpoint Symposium session is Tetyana Lokot, who points out the value of ephemerality for citizens living in autocratic regimes. Russia is one example of this: there are significant differences in how the state and its citizens define what networked citizenship means, and ephemerality plays an important role in this context.


Such differences manifest in understandings of whether citizenship is conferred by the state, or achieved by citizens in their actions; this implies different views on individual agency, too. Digital acts of citizenship further complicate this picture, not least also because digital networks do …

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Beyond Interaction Networks: An Introduction to Practice Mapping (ACSPRI 2024)

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