Tuesday, May 13, 2025
Germany Latest News
  • Sports
  • USA
  • Asia
  • Health
  • Life Style
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Latin America
  • Africa
  • Europe
No Result
View All Result
Germany Latest News

How Twitter bots get people to spread fake news

by The Editor
November 21, 2018
in Science
0

To spread misinformation like wildfire, bots will strike a match on social media but then urge people to fan the flames.

Automated Twitter accounts, called bots, helped spread bogus articles during and after the 2016 U.S. presidential election by making the content appear popular enough that human users would trust it and share it more widely, researchers report online November 20 in Nature Communications. Although people have often suggested that bots help drive the spread of misinformation online, this study is one of the first to provide solid evidence for the role that bots play.

The finding suggests that cracking down on devious bots may help fight the fake news epidemic (SN: 3/31/18, p. 14).

Filippo Menczer, an informatics and computer scientist at Indiana University Bloomington, and colleagues analyzed 13.6 million Twitter posts from May 2016 to March 2017. All of these messages linked to articles on sites known to regularly publish false or misleading information. Menczers team then used Botometer, a computer program that learned to recognize bots by studying tens of thousands of Twitter accounts, to determine the likelihood that each account in the dataset was a bot.

Unmasking the bots exposed how the automated accounts encourage people to disseminate misinformation. One strategy is to heavily promote a low-credibility article immediately after its published, which creates the illusion of popular support and encourages human users to trust and share the post. The researchers found that in the first few seconds after a viral story appeared on Twitter, at least half the accounts sharing that article were likely bots; once a story had been around for at least 10 seconds, most accounts spreading it were maintained by real people.

“What these bots are doing is enabling low-credibility stories to gain enough momentum that they can later go viral. Theyre giving that first big push,” says V.S. Subrahmanian, a computer scientist at Dartmouth College not involved in the work.

The bots second strategy involves targeting people with many followers, either by mentioning those people specifically or replying to their tweets with posts that include links to low-credibility content. If a single popular account retweets a bots story, “it becomes kind of mainstream, and it can get a lot of visibility,” Menczer says.

These findings suggest that shutting down bot accounts could help curb the circulation of low-credibility content. Indeed, in a simulated version of Twitter, Menczers team found that weeding out the 10,000 accounts judged most likely to be bots could cut the number of retweets linking to shoddy information by about 70 percent.

Bot and human accounts are sometimes difficult to tell apart, so if social media platforms simply shut down suspicious accounts, “theyre going to get it wrong sometimes,” Subrahmanian says. Instead, Twitter could require accounts to complete a captcha test to prove they are not a robot before posting a message (SN: 3/17/07, p. 170).

Suppressing duplicitous bot accounts may help, but people also play a critical role in making misinformation go viral, says Sinan Aral, an expert on information diffusion in social networks at MIT not involved in the work. “Were part of this problem, and being more discerning, being able to not retweet false information, thats our responsibility,” he says.

Bots have used similar methods in an attempt to manipulate online political discussions beyond the 2016 U.S. election, as seen in another analysis of nearly 4 million Twitter messages posted in the weeks surrounding Catalonias bid for independence from Spain in October 2017. In that case, bots bombarded influential human users — both for and against independence — with inflammatory content meant to exacerbate the political divide, researchers report online November 20 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

These surveys help highlight the role of bots in spreading certain messages, says computer scientist Emilio Ferrara of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and a coauthor of the PNAS study. But “more work is needed to understand whether such exposures may have affected individuals beliefs and political views, ultimately changing their voting preferences.”

science news

Related posts

Can Misinfo Harm Science?

Can Misinfo Harm Science?

February 7, 2023
Climate change: World aviation agrees ‘aspirational’ net zero plan

Climate change: World aviation agrees ‘aspirational’ net zero plan

October 8, 2022

To spread misinformation like wildfire, bots will strike a match on social media but then urge people to fan the flames.

Automated Twitter accounts, called bots, helped spread bogus articles during and after the 2016 U.S. presidential election by making the content appear popular enough that human users would trust it and share it more widely, researchers report online November 20 in Nature Communications. Although people have often suggested that bots help drive the spread of misinformation online, this study is one of the first to provide solid evidence for the role that bots play.

The finding suggests that cracking down on devious bots may help fight the fake news epidemic (SN: 3/31/18, p. 14).

Filippo Menczer, an informatics and computer scientist at Indiana University Bloomington, and colleagues analyzed 13.6 million Twitter posts from May 2016 to March 2017. All of these messages linked to articles on sites known to regularly publish false or misleading information. Menczers team then used Botometer, a computer program that learned to recognize bots by studying tens of thousands of Twitter accounts, to determine the likelihood that each account in the dataset was a bot.

Unmasking the bots exposed how the automated accounts encourage people to disseminate misinformation. One strategy is to heavily promote a low-credibility article immediately after its published, which creates the illusion of popular support and encourages human users to trust and share the post. The researchers found that in the first few seconds after a viral story appeared on Twitter, at least half the accounts sharing that article were likely bots; once a story had been around for at least 10 seconds, most accounts spreading it were maintained by real people.

“What these bots are doing is enabling low-credibility stories to gain enough momentum that they can later go viral. Theyre giving that first big push,” says V.S. Subrahmanian, a computer scientist at Dartmouth College not involved in the work.

The bots second strategy involves targeting people with many followers, either by mentioning those people specifically or replying to their tweets with posts that include links to low-credibility content. If a single popular account retweets a bots story, “it becomes kind of mainstream, and it can get a lot of visibility,” Menczer says.

These findings suggest that shutting down bot accounts could help curb the circulation of low-credibility content. Indeed, in a simulated version of Twitter, Menczers team found that weeding out the 10,000 accounts judged most likely to be bots could cut the number of retweets linking to shoddy information by about 70 percent.

Bot and human accounts are sometimes difficult to tell apart, so if social media platforms simply shut down suspicious accounts, “theyre going to get it wrong sometimes,” Subrahmanian says. Instead, Twitter could require accounts to complete a captcha test to prove they are not a robot before posting a message (SN: 3/17/07, p. 170).

Suppressing duplicitous bot accounts may help, but people also play a critical role in making misinformation go viral, says Sinan Aral, an expert on information diffusion in social networks at MIT not involved in the work. “Were part of this problem, and being more discerning, being able to not retweet false information, thats our responsibility,” he says.

Bots have used similar methods in an attempt to manipulate online political discussions beyond the 2016 U.S. election, as seen in another analysis of nearly 4 million Twitter messages posted in the weeks surrounding Catalonias bid for independence from Spain in October 2017. In that case, bots bombarded influential human users — both for and against independence — with inflammatory content meant to exacerbate the political divide, researchers report online November 20 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

These surveys help highlight the role of bots in spreading certain messages, says computer scientist Emilio Ferrara of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and a coauthor of the PNAS study. But “more work is needed to understand whether such exposures may have affected individuals beliefs and political views, ultimately changing their voting preferences.”

science news

Previous Post

An exploding meteor may have wiped out ancient Dead Sea communities

Next Post

Dont spank your kids. Do time-outs and positive talk instead, pediatricians say

Next Post

Dont spank your kids. Do time-outs and positive talk instead, pediatricians say

RECOMMENDED NEWS

EU and Dublin in intense talks on no-deal plan for Irish border

6 years ago
World’s most expensive beef noodle soup

World’s most expensive beef noodle soup

7 years ago
Stormy Daniels Alleges Michael Avenatti Sued Trump Against Her Wishes

Stormy Daniels Alleges Michael Avenatti Sued Trump Against Her Wishes

6 years ago
Brussels moves goalposts on glyphosate

Brussels moves goalposts on glyphosate

7 years ago

FOLLOW US

  • 139 Followers
  • 87.2k Followers
  • 202k Subscribers

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • 1xbet Casino Russia
  • 1xbet Russian Top
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Health
  • latest news
  • Latin America
  • Life Style
  • Mail Order Brides
  • Mostbet
  • Online dating
  • onlyfans
  • Pin Up
  • Pin Up Russia
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Uncategorized
  • USA

BROWSE BY TOPICS

2018 League Bali United Beijing BlackBerry Brazil Broja Budget Travel Bundesliga California Champions League Chelsea China Chopper Bike Coronavirus COVID COVID-19 Crime Doctor Terawan EU France French German Istana Negara Italy Kazakhstan Market Stories Mexico National Exam Nigeria Omicron Pakistan Police protests Qatar Ronaldo Russia Smart Voting Sweden TikTok Trump UK Ukraine US vaccine Visit Bali
No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • OnlyFans Platform Analysis
  • How to Day German Fashion
  • Southeast Continental Capabilities
  • What is a Mail Order Wife?
  • What to Discuss on a First Date?

Categories

  • 1xbet Casino Russia
  • 1xbet Russian Top
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Health
  • latest news
  • Latin America
  • Life Style
  • Mail Order Brides
  • Mostbet
  • Online dating
  • onlyfans
  • Pin Up
  • Pin Up Russia
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Uncategorized
  • USA

Tags

2018 League Bali United Beijing BlackBerry Brazil Broja Budget Travel Bundesliga California Champions League Chelsea China Chopper Bike Coronavirus COVID COVID-19 Crime Doctor Terawan EU France French German Istana Negara Italy Kazakhstan Market Stories Mexico National Exam Nigeria Omicron Pakistan Police protests Qatar Ronaldo Russia Smart Voting Sweden TikTok Trump UK Ukraine US vaccine Visit Bali
Federal Government focuses on “integrated security”
latest news

Federal Government focuses on “integrated security”

by The Editor
June 14, 2023
0

Berlin (dpa) – The Federal Government is responding to the challenges of an increasingly unstable world order by means of a “policy...

Read more

Recent News

  • OnlyFans Platform Analysis
  • How to Day German Fashion
  • Southeast Continental Capabilities

Category

  • 1xbet Casino Russia
  • 1xbet Russian Top
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Health
  • latest news
  • Latin America
  • Life Style
  • Mail Order Brides
  • Mostbet
  • Online dating
  • onlyfans
  • Pin Up
  • Pin Up Russia
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Uncategorized
  • USA

Recent News

OnlyFans Platform Analysis

June 12, 2024

How to Day German Fashion

May 5, 2024
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result
  • Sports
  • USA
  • Asia
  • Health
  • Life Style
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Latin America
  • Africa
  • Europe

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.