4.5 Article

Black Trolls Matter: Racial and Ideological Asymmetries in Social Media Disinformation

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW
Volume 40, Issue 3, Pages 560-578

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0894439320914853

Keywords

disinformation; misinformation; fake news; Internet Research Agency; Twitter; ideological asymmetry; digital blackface

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The recent increase in disinformation and propaganda on social media has attracted significant attention from social scientists. Research on this topic has found ideological and racial asymmetries in the content and reception of disinformation, and a computational analysis of tweets from the Russian Internet Research Agency reveals that presenting as a Black activist is the most effective predictor of engagement with disinformation.
The recent rise of disinformation and propaganda on social media has attracted strong interest from social scientists. Research on the topic has repeatedly observed ideological asymmetries in disinformation content and reception, wherein conservatives are more likely to view, redistribute, and believe such content. However, preliminary evidence has suggested that race may also play a substantial role in determining the targeting and consumption of disinformation content. Such racial asymmetries may exist alongside, or even instead of, ideological ones. Our computational analysis of 5.2 million tweets by the Russian government-funded troll farm known as the Internet Research Agency sheds light on these possibilities. We find stark differences in the numbers of unique accounts and tweets originating from ostensibly liberal, conservative, and Black left-leaning individuals. But diverging from prior empirical accounts, we find racial presentation-specifically, presenting as a Black activist-to be the most effective predictor of disinformation engagement by far. Importantly, these results could only be detected once we disaggregated Black-presenting accounts from non-Black liberal accounts. In addition to its contributions to the study of ideological asymmetry in disinformation content and reception, this study also underscores the general relevance of race to disinformation studies.

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