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Social Media

Report: Facebook, Twitter Still Not Responsible for Radicalizing People

Political polarization drives social media use, rather than the other way around.

Joe Lancaster | 9.29.2021 10:45 AM

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In an era of so-called fake news, Russian bot armies, and QAnon, many people take for granted that social media use fuels political polarization. New research suggests, however, that they may have it backward.

In a new study published September 19, Maria Nordbrandt, a graduate student at Sweden's Uppsala University, set out to test the effect of social media usage on an "us-vs.-them" mentality known as affective polarization, typically characterized by "a growing dislike and distrust of politically defined out-groups such as certain parties and their supporters." Left to spread, this can lead to "erosion of constructive political debate, social trust, and inter-party cooperation, as well as with declined willingness to accept electoral defeat."

Nordbrandt used data drawn from the Longitudinal Internet studies for the Social Sciences (LISS) panel, a database of survey results from "5,000 households, comprising approximately 7,500 individuals" in the Netherlands. Drawing data from more than 5,000 individuals, Nordbrandt measured respondents on how sympathetic they found the various Dutch political parties, as well as how often they used social media platforms, and tracked them and their results over 7 years (from 2014 to 2020).

Nordbrandt found that "starting using social media or elevating usage did not impact an individual's level of affective polarization over time," but rather that "affective polarization affects social media usage."

"These results should essentially be good news from a democratic point of view," she added, "and should alleviate the widespread worry that social media is a major driver of polarization in society."

Nordbrandt limits her research to Facebook and Twitter, but as Reason's Robby Soave details in his new book, Tech Panic, the story is the same with YouTube: "While it's likely the case that among YouTube's two-billion-plus users, someone somewhere became radicalized by consuming progressively more incendiary content, the reverse case—de-radicalization due to the consumption of normal videos—is statistically more likely, at least on paper."

In fact, there is a more likely explanation for this phenomenon of radicalization. In a 2015 study, Brian Weeks, associate professor of communications and media at the University of Michigan, found that whether one believes misinformation has much more to do with their emotional state, specifically that "the independent experience of two emotions, anger and anxiety, in part determines whether citizens consider misinformation in a partisan or open-minded fashion." People who are angry tend to seek out information that confirms their biases, whereas people who are anxious tend to seek out information that contradicts them.

If someone is angry that their presidential candidate lost, they are likely to look for negative information to justify their opprobrium and will believe any new information which renders their opponent in a negative light. If they are uneasy about the state of the world, they are more likely to seek out a wider swath of information, even if it directly contradicts information they already feel to be true.

In practice, this can make someone who is fearful of, for example, the proliferation of a global pandemic, more susceptible to believing in outlandish theories—like the idea that vaccines contain microchips. Or a generalized concern about child exploitation could render someone capable of buying into the QAnon conspiracy theory. In either scenario, however, current findings indicate that social media is not what would drive them to extreme polarization, but rather that extreme polarization would drive their usage of social media.

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NEXT: People Have Been Panicking About New Media Since Before the Printing Press

Joe Lancaster is an assistant editor at Reason.

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  1. SQRLSY One   4 years ago

    In closely associated news...

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-25738-6
    “Neutral bots probe political bias on social media”

    “We find that the political alignment of the initial friend has a major impact on the popularity, social network structure, exposure to bots and low-credibility sources, and political alignment manifested in the actions of each drifter. However, we find no evidence that these outcomes can be attributed to platform bias. “ … Emphasis on the last part!

    Also, right-wingers are FAR more likely to use low-credibility sources than the left! Even after EXCLUDING Breitbart News!

    (What is in common here is that we can't honestly blame polarization on modern social media).

    1. Mother's Lament   4 years ago

      Sqrlsy doesn't understand how bots work if he thinks that their programming is automatically bias-free.
      Also, who determines a sources credibility and what are the standards? For instance, Sqrlsy often posts Salon links here, but here he pretends that Breitbart is even more biased than they are.

      1. Yvette Jones   4 years ago

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        Try it, you won’t regret it!…………….....VISIT LINK

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   4 years ago

      Also, right-wingers are FAR more likely to use low-credibility sources

      I don't know anyone on the right who watches CNN.

      1. LilianBraim   4 years ago

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  2. Rich   4 years ago

    Nordbrandt found that "starting using social media or elevating usage did not impact an individual's level of affective polarization over time," but rather that "affective polarization affects social media usage."

    *** eagerly ***

    But social media should still be banned, right?

  3. Bill Godshall   4 years ago

    "and should alleviate the widespread worry that social media is a major driver of polarization in society."

    Except that social media companies (i.e. their woke left wing owners) have strategically marginalized (i.e. inserting warnings, removing posts, limiting and cancelling access to accounts) millions of conservatives, libertarians and anyone else who posts facts, data, other evidence and/or advocates policies that left wingers at social media don't like.

    1. Bill Godshall   4 years ago

      Meanwhile, the same social media companies that have purged conservatives and libertarians (and have censored millions of truthful statements) allowed thousands of BLM and Antifa organizers use their platforms to promote and mobilize riots (that harmed and killed far more people, and destroyed far more property than occurred at the largely peaceful Jan 6 protest at the Capitol).

  4. buckleup   4 years ago

    Still pimping crony amoral billionaires running trillion dollar multi national corporations I see.

    1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   4 years ago

      So Bezos, Page and Brin are "amoral"?

      What makes them amoral?

      If they were wingnuts would you call them amoral?

      1. Dillinger   4 years ago

        Bezos cheats on his wife like he's the King of England

        1. Claptrap   4 years ago

          And he's got such rotten taste in paramours.

          1. Dillinger   4 years ago

            MacKenzie Bezos smart and hot. He's an idiot.

            1. Claptrap   4 years ago

              I can't begrudge the guy for having had enough of his wife's shit, it happens, But the replacement is nowhere near trophy wife quality. And if you can buy entire first-world countries than you should really be able to do better than a remodeled, past-her-prime, fame whoring, d-list reporter.

              1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   4 years ago

                I rate Mackenzie Bezos (nee Scott) as hotter than Lauren Sánchez. Lauren Sánchez appears like a used-to-be, who's well down that disturbing road of plastic surgery and collagen injections (I'm starting to look at you, Nicole Kidman).

                Plus Mackenzie Bezos was smart enough to say "no" to the Washington Post as a divorce gift.

                1. Dillinger   4 years ago

                  gotta get her my digits lol. my brother stocked Wendy Schmidt's wine cellar I told him to give her my number too

  5. Mother's Lament   4 years ago

    The the Democratic party and the clerisy are the ones responsible for radicalization. Facebook is just a tool.

  6. buckleup   4 years ago

    Right after I read this trash heap I read that Google YouTube decided to shitcan any talk about vaccines that isn't government approved by committee.

    Nice call libertarians.

    1. Mother's Lament   4 years ago

      Muh pRivAtE mEgA-c0rpoRAtioN can censor billions of people for the glory of the Democratic Party if they want.

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   4 years ago

        Fuck covid vaccine mandates!

        1. Sometimes a Great Notion   4 years ago

          And that was from my Android phone, so I'd assume their censorship ends where the ad dollars aren't. You get what you pay for.

  7. Dillinger   4 years ago

    >>Political polarization drives social media use

    115% of people who didn't give a fuck about politics before the webs and then the fakebooks are now convinced every fucking thing they post will change world history

    1. Roberta   4 years ago

      Then you'd think they'd be more careful about typos, grammar, and spelling.

      1. Dillinger   4 years ago

        i don't make typos are you complaining at my grammar and spelling?

  8. CE   4 years ago

    Who are you going to believe, our data from the past 6 years, or your own fallible memory of what life was like before social media? That time didn't exist.

  9. sarcasmic   4 years ago

    Oh come on! Everyone knows that the Russians used Facebook to get Trump elected, and that Facebook got Biden elected! I mean, duh! Hillary was the anointed one, so the only possible explanation for her losing was Facebook! Then Facebook censored Trump supporters to prevent him from getting elected! Facebook controls the wooooooooorrrrrrlllllddddd!!!!!!

  10. CE   4 years ago

    Ars Technica covers Stossel's lawsuit against Facebook... 99% of comments trust Facebook fact checking apparently....

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2021/09/ex-fox-host-claims-facebook-defamed-him-by-fact-checking-climate-change-videos/

  11. TJJ2000   4 years ago

    The Nazi-Regime is what is Radicalizing People.
    There's a lot of people in the USA who don't appreciate a Nazi-Government.

    1. Vulgar Madman   4 years ago

      They can’t be nazi if they don’t call themselves that!

      1. TJJ2000   4 years ago

        They actually do; National Socialists = abbreviated Nazi's.

        1. Vulgar Madman   4 years ago

          According to communists, (who would never lie) they are the opposites of the nazis.

  12. Multimetertools   4 years ago

    An internal Facebook report presented to executives in 2018 found that the company was well aware that its product, specifically its recommendation engine, stoked divisiveness and polarization, according to a new report from The Wall Street Journal.

    Yet, despite warnings about the effect this could have on society, Facebook leadership ignored the findings and has largely tried to absolve itself of responsibility with regard to partisan divides and other forms of polarization it directly contributed to, the report states. The reason? Changes might disproportionately affect conservatives and might hurt engagement, the report says.

    “Our algorithms exploit the human brain’s attraction to divisiveness,” one slide from the presentation read. The group found that if this core element of its recommendation engine were left unchecked, it would continue to serve Facebook users “more and more divisive content in an effort to gain user attention & increase time on the platform.” A separate internal report, crafted in 2016, said 64 percent of people who joined an extremist group on Facebook only did so because the company’s algorithm recommended it to them, the WSJ reports.

  13. Sahil Sachdeva   4 years ago

    Social media platforms can't be biased for anyone.

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