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Censorship or conspiracy theory? Trump supporters say Facebook and Twitter censor them but conservatives still rule social media

  • November 30, 2020
  • Hawaii

A former Democrat-turned-Trump supporter from Knightstown, Indiana, Gayla Baer-Taylor’s blood pressure rose every time Facebook and Twitter fact-checked and restricted claims by President Donald Trump and other Republicans that the November election was rigged.

A couple weeks ago, Facebook put a notice referring users to official election results on one of her posts: “I’m going to need a MUCH bigger swear jar before President Trump completes his second term.”

“When did we get so stupid that we need social media to tell us what to think?” she told USA TODAY.

A recent poll shows that majorities in both parties think political censorship is likely occurring on social media, but that belief is most prevalent on the political right. And, with the country in the throes of an unparalleled attempt by a sitting president to overturn the election and hold onto the White House, it’s growing.

squelch conservative voices​​​​​.

“I know of no academic research that concludes there is a systemic bias – liberal or conservative – in either the content moderation policies or in the prioritization of content by algorithms by major social media platforms,” said Steven Johnson, an information technology professor at the University of Virginia McIntire School of Commerce. 

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An analysis of millions of social media posts by Politico and the nonpartisan think tank Institute for Strategic Dialogue found that right-wing social media influencers, media outlets and other GOP supporters drove the online conversation about the Black Lives Matter movement and voter fraud, two of the most heated election issues.

According to research Johnson conducted with his University of Virginia colleagues Brent Kitchens and Peter Gray, typical conservative users, in months when they visited Facebook more than usual, read news that was about 30% more conservative than the online news they would typically read. “Moreover, we found that Facebook usage is five times more polarizing for conservatives than for liberals,” he said.

Facebook, Johnson said, “prioritizes content that is more engaging which is often more partisan content.”

Facebook exec: Conservatives more popular than liberals 

Facebook told Politico in September that right-wing personalities have a distinct advantage on the platform, not because the algorithms favor conservatives, but because they connect with people on a visceral level.

“Right-wing populism is always more engaging,” a Facebook executive told Politico, when asked why Dan Bongino and Ben Shapiro drive such high engagement. The executive said the content speaks to “an incredibly strong, primitive emotion” by touching on such topics as “nation, protection, the other, anger, fear.”

Researchers agree that algorithms don’t have a political affiliation or party. Instead, algorithms favor content that elicits strong reactions from users, keeping them hooked so Facebook and Twitter can sell more advertising revenue.

A former Facebook employee, Adam Conner, now vice president of tech policy at the liberal Center for American Progress Action, told Politico that “it’s absurd for Facebook to say this is just something that’s playing out in a neutral way.”

“Facebook is not a mirror,” he said. “The news-feed algorithm is an accelerant.”

social media is biased has been around for a long time but intensified in recent years as the president made “social media abuses” a major plank of his administration and reelection campaign.

Nine in 10 Republicans and independents who lean toward the Republican Party say it’s at least somewhat likely that social media platforms censor political viewpoints they find objectionable, up slightly from 85% in 2018, according to an August report from the Pew Research Center.

With 89 million followers on Twitter and nearly 35 million on Facebook, Trump wields one of social media’s largest megaphones which will help him shape the national conversation long after he leaves office.

“Every year, countless Americans are banned, blacklisted, and silenced through arbitrary or malicious enforcement of ever-shifting rules,” Trump said during a September appearance with Attorney General William Barr.

Francesca Tripodi, an assistant professor in the University of North Carolina’s School of Information and Library Science, says the bias accusations grew out of similar allegations against the mainstream media.

“Part of it definitely stems from a larger distrust in institutions and access to information,” said Tripodi, a senior faculty researcher with UNC’s Center for Information, Technology, and Public Life. “Part of it is linked to the overall opaqueness of the platforms.”

Underlying it all is growing discomfort with a small cabal of megacompanies controlling the nation’s online conversation.

Some right-wing personalities including radio host Mark Levin and Fox News host Sean Hannity have joined social media alternatives like Parler where pro-Trump conspiracy theories and unfounded allegations of voter fraud trend unfettered.

confronted Twitter’s Jack Dorsey in a recent Senate hearing over Facebook and Twitter throttling the spread of a New York Post article which made uncorroborated claims about Hunter Biden’s business dealings.

“Who the hell elected you and put you in charge of what the media are allowed to report and what the American people are allowed to hear?” Cruz said. 

Trump supporters say Facebook is censoring the president

Researchers say many groups across the political spectrum feel their opinions and perspectives are under siege from social media, but it’s difficult to make the case that the platforms are biased against any group since they disclose so little about how they decide what content is allowed and what is not. 

Dorsey and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg say their platforms strike a balance between promoting free expression and removing hate, abuse and misinformation from their platforms. They acknowledge making some enforcement errors but say their policies are applied fairly to everyone.

unfair to conservatives. “I see it and experience it a lot,” she said. 

According to Baer-Taylor, increased censorship of right-wing voices during the COVID-19 pandemic and the presidential election helped hijack the vote to tip the election to Joe Biden.

Also frustrated is Krishnan Seshasayee, 47, an IT architect and Trump supporter from Illinois who leans Republican but worked on Obama’s campaign in 2008 and donated to Tulsi Gabbard’s campaign this election cycle. 

Seshasayee believes social media should be treated as a tool that gives people a voice, like a mic or a pen.

“Would a megaphone suppress the speech of the speaker? Would a pen suppress the thought flow of a writer?” he said. “It will best serve the people and themselves when they just remain as a platform to express opinions without judging the content of posts.”

Conservatives say social media should stop moderating content

Facebook and Twitter have held meetings with high-profile conservatives to fend off persistent accusations of liberal bias, fueling speculation that Dorsey and Zuckerberg were trying to appease Trump and keep out of his crosshairs.

Twitter’s Dorsey told lawmakers in November that the platforms should be more open with users about how content moderation decisions are made and should offer a straightforward way to appeal moderation decisions. He’d also like to see users be able to opt out of algorithms that determine what content they see on the platform. 

Article source: http://rssfeeds.usatoday.com/~/639404827/0/usatodaycomwashington-topstories~Censorship-or-conspiracy-theory-Trump-supporters-say-Facebook-and-Twitter-censor-them-but-conservatives-still-rule-social-media/

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