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Snurb — Saturday 3 November 2018 18:56

Moral Framings of the Refugee Crisis in Danish News Articles and Facebook Comments

Politics | Journalism | Social Media | Facebook | ECREA 2018 |

The next speaker at ECREA 2018 is Deniz Neriman Duru, who begins by highlighting the role of the news media as presenting moral guidelines for their audiences, here especially in the context of the edit framing of the European refugee crisis. This can be studied usefully by examining the linkages between mainstream media framing in and social media reactions to news media articles.

The project collected data on article comments on Facebook in September 2015, at the peak of the refugee crisis, in the pages of Danish news outlets, examining the content of articles and of the threads attached to …

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Snurb — Thursday 1 November 2018 19:19

Polarisation in Comments on News Outlets’ Facebook Pages

Politics | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Facebook | ECREA 2018 |

The next speaker in this ECREA 2018 session is Edda Humprecht, whose focus is on polarisation on Facebook. There is evidence of considerable negativity on this platform, and this may affect users’ perceptions of the world around them; in particular, it may increase their perception of societal polarisation. News outlets operating on the platform are now often accepting negative comments because they do not want to be seen to be censoring user comments – yet at the same time they are complaining about the negative aspects of user participation on social media.

Potential drivers for such negativity may include …

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Snurb — Thursday 1 November 2018 19:17

Perceived Political Polarisation in Germany and Switzerland

Politics | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Facebook | ECREA 2018 |

The next speaker in this ECREA 2018 session is Jasmin Kadel, who presents a comparative study of polarisation across Switzerland and Germany. Polarisation can be understood along factual (across issues), perceived (misjudgments about polarisation in society), and affective dimensions (appreciation of co-partisan others); the study examined such polarisation amongst adult newspaper readers in both countries.

Factual polarisation turned out to be slightly stronger in Switzerland than in Germany, but it is weak in both countries; perceived polarisation, however, is greater in both countries, and especially so in Germany – Germans are less polarised but see them selves as more polarised …

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Snurb — Monday 29 October 2018 00:04

New Methods for Detecting Bots across Multiple Platforms

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | iCS 2018 |

The final iCS Symposium session continues the bot theme with a presentation by Pascal Jürgens. Pascal begins by outlining our current dilemma: threats of communicative manipulation via social media are rising, yet our access to the platform data we need to understand these activities is declining. But we may be able to address this dilemma by employing new and different methodologies.

Interestingly, in Germany there are now moves to create a law that requires bots to be labelled – yet this is unlikely to be effective unless there can be a clear definition of bots in the first place, and …

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Snurb — Sunday 28 October 2018 20:39

Can Facebook Ads Be Used to Survey Hard-to-Reach Communities?

Politics | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Facebook | iCS 2018 |

The final speaker in this iCS Symposium session is Laura Ianelli, whose focus is on understanding the supporters of conspiracy theories. Some such theories may be amusing, but many others are in fact deadly serious and can have significant negative effects. The networks for these theories can be closed epistemological networks with distinctive self-sealing qualities, and who are increasingly suspicious of broader social networks; this makes them difficult to reach for critical scholars.

Drawing on available digital traces in platforms such as Facebook would be one solution to this, but the increasing closure of its APIs is making this more …

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Snurb — Sunday 28 October 2018 20:04

Studying News Content Engagement in the 2018 Italian Election

Politics | Elections | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Facebook | Twitter | iCS 2018 |

The next iCS Symposium session starts with Fabio Giglietto, presenting his team’s results on the use of social media in the March 2018 Italian election. The project’s aim was to comprehensively examine the role of social media during the election, focussing especially on social media audience engagement with the various media sources available.

The project drew first on data from Twitter, capturing all retweets of Italian parties’ and politicians’ posts and assessing the political leaning of the accounts contributing to this datasets. It then captured the tweets by the top 5,000 contributors to this dataset, to examine which news …

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Snurb — Sunday 28 October 2018 00:28

The APIcalyse: What Can Researchers Do?

‘Fake News’ | 'Big Data' | Social Media | Facebook | Twitter | iCS 2018 |

My own keynote closes the first day of the iCS Symposium “Locked out of Social Platforms: An iCS Symposium on Challenges to Studying Disinformation”. Here are the slides:

Pushed towards Dysfunction: How Social Media API Restrictions Distort Research Outcomes from Axel Bruns

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Snurb — Saturday 27 October 2018 20:32

New Uses of Social Media Metadata in Critical Research

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | iCS 2018 |

The next paper in this iCS Symposium session is by Amelia Acker and Joan Donovan, and focusses on new approaches to gathering metadata from social media platforms without relying on Application Programming Interfaces. Indeed, platform providers are generally unable to predict all of the ways in which users, including researchers, are likely to engage with their platforms, and this leaves loopholes that researchers are able to exploit.

At the present moment, with API access increasingly limited, we clearly need new methods. Part of the issue here is in how the platforms themselves classify their own data through metadata; media manipulation …

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Snurb — Saturday 27 October 2018 20:14

Beyond the Language of Technocultural Discourse

Social Media | Facebook | iCS 2018 |

The next speaker at the iCS Symposium is Yidong Steven Wang, who begins with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s recent appearance in front of the U.S. Congress. This demonstrated the limited technical understanding of U.S. politicians, as well as Zuckerberg’s ability to evade the difficult questions.

Within the overall context of the current post-truth paradigm, the technocultural discourse in such hearings articulates technological agency, which in turn informs current regulatory principles. Technological agency here refers to what machines are seen to be able to do: we have a certain discursively derived understanding of such agency, and the current paradigm informing such …

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Snurb — Saturday 13 October 2018 23:49

Non-Profit Organisations’ Struggles against Facebook Logics

Politics | Facebook | AoIR 2018 |

The next speaker in this AoIR 2018 session is Rena Bivens, whose focus is on non-profit anti-violence activists online. The literature on such initiatives is still poorly developed; there is a great deal of advice on how these organisations should operate online, but how they actually operate remains poorly understood.

Rena approaches this by examining the Facebook and Twitter content posted by some 20 non-profit organisations in this space in Canada and the United States, which often also draw on the guidebooks for non-profits published by the platforms themselves. She is focussing here especially on Facebook, and enhances her …

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

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Untangling the Furball: A Practice Mapping Approach to the Analysis of Multimodal Interactions in Social Networks (Social Media + Society)

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Inside the Moral Panic at Australia's 'First of Its Kind' Summit about Kids on Social Media (Crikey)

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Brightest before Dawn (CD, 2011)

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Gatewatching and News Curation: The Lecture Series

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