Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times World News

.

How social media – aided by bots – amplifies Islamophobia online

  • Written by Saif Shahin, Assistant Professor in School of Communication and Faculty Affiliate with Antiracist Research and Policy Center, American University

In August 2021, a Facebook ad campaign[1] criticizing Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib, the United States’ first Muslim congresswomen, came under intense scrutiny. Critics charged that the ads linked the congresswomen with terrorism, and some faith leaders condemned the campaign[2] as “Islamophobic” – that is, spreading fear of Islam and hatred against Muslims.

This was hardly the first time the pair faced Islamophobic or racist abuse, especially on the internet. As a communications professor who studies the politics of race and identity online[3], I have seen that Omar is often a target of white nationalist attacks on Twitter.

But online attacks on Muslims are not limited to politicians. Twenty years after the 9/11 attacks, stereotypes that associate Muslims with terrorism go far beyond depictions in newspapers[4] and television[5]. Recent research raises the alarm about rampant Islamophobia in digital spaces[6], particularly far-right groups’ use of disinformation and other manipulation tactics to vilify Muslims and their faith.

Amplifying hate

In July 2021, for example, a team led by media researcher Lawrence Pintak[7] published research on tweets that mentioned Omar during her campaign[8] for Congress. They reported that half the tweets they studied[9] involved “overtly Islamophobic or xenophobic language or other forms of hate speech.”

The majority of offensive posts came from a small number of “provocateurs” – accounts that seed Islamophobic conversations on Twitter. Many of these accounts belonged to conservatives, they found. But the researchers reported[10] that such accounts themselves did not generate significant traffic.

Instead, the team found that “amplifiers” were primarily responsible: accounts that collect and circulate agents provocateurs’ ideas through mass retweets and replies.

Their most interesting finding was that only four of the top 20 Islamophobic amplifiers were authentic accounts. Most were either bots[11] – algorithmically generated to mimic human accounts – or “sockpuppets[12],” which are human accounts that use fake identities to deceive others and manipulate conversations online.

Bots and sockpuppets disseminated Islamophobic tweets originally posted by authentic accounts, creating a “megaphone effect” that scales up Islamophobia across the Twitterverse.

“Cloaked” accounts

Twitter has a little over 200 million daily active users[13]. Facebook, meanwhile, has nearly 2 billion[14] – and some use similar manipulation strategies on this platform to escalate Islamophobia.

Disinformation researcher Johan Farkas[15] and his colleagues have studied “cloaked” Facebook pages[16] in Denmark, which are run by individuals or groups who pretend to be radical Islamists in order to provoke antipathy against Muslims. The scholars’ analysis of 11 such pages, identified as fakes, found that organizers posted spiteful claims about ethnic Danes and Danish society and threatened an Islamic takeover of the country.

Facebook removed the pages for violating the platform’s content policy, according to the study[17], but they reemerged under a different guise. Although Farkas’ team couldn’t confirm who was creating the pages, they found patterns indicating “the same individual or group hiding behind the cloak.”

These “cloaked” pages[18] succeeded in prompting thousands of hostile and racist comments toward the radical Islamists that users believed were running the pages. But they also prompted anger toward the wider Muslim community in Denmark, including refugees.

Such comments often fit into a wider view of Muslims as a threat to “Western values” and “whiteness[19],” underscoring how Islamophobia goes beyond religious intolerance.

Dual threats

This is not to suggest that “real” Islamist extremists[20] are absent from the web. The internet in general[21] and social media in particular[22] have long served as a means of Islamist radicalization.

But in recent years, far-right groups have been expanding their online presence much faster than Islamists. Between 2012 and 2016, white nationalists’ Twitter followers grew by more than 600%, according to a study[23] by extremism expert J.M. Berger[24]. White nationalists “outperform ISIS in nearly every social metric, from follower counts to tweets per day,” he found.

A more recent study of Berger’s, a 2018 analysis[25] of alt-right content on Twitter, found “a very significant presence of automation, fake profiles and other social media manipulation tactics” among such groups.

Social media companies have emphasized their policies to identify and stamp out content from Islamic terror groups. Big Tech critics, however, argue that the companies are less willing to police right-wing groups[26] like white supremacists, making it easier to spread Islamophobia online.

High stakes

How social media – aided by bots – amplifies Islamophobia online Violence toward Muslims has been reported extensively over the past 20 years. Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images[27]

Exposure to Islamophobic messages has grave consequences. Experiments show that portrayals of Muslims as terrorists[28] can increase support for civil restrictions on Muslim-Americans, as well as support for military action against Muslim-majority countries.

The same research indicates that being exposed to content that challenges stereotypes of Muslims – such as Muslims volunteering to help fellow Americans during the Christmas season – can have the opposite effect and reduce support for such policies, especially among political conservatives.

Violence toward Muslims, the vandalization of mosques[29] and burnings of the Quran[30] have been extensively reported in the U.S. over the past 20 years, and there are indications that Islamophobia continues to rise[31].

But studies following the 2016 election indicate Muslims now experience Islamophobia “more frequently online than face-to-face.”[32] Earlier in 2021, a Muslim advocacy group sued Facebook executives[33], accusing the company of failing to remove anti-Muslim hate speech. The suit claims that Facebook itself commissioned a civil rights audit that found the website “created an atmosphere where Muslims feel under siege.”

In 2011, around the 10th anniversary of 9/11, a report by the Center for American Progress documented the country’s extensive Islamophobia network[34], especially drawing attention to the role of “misinformation experts” from the far-right in spreading anti-Muslim propaganda.

Five years later, the entire country was awash in talk of “misinformation” experts using similar strategies – this time, trying to influence the presidential election[35]. Ultimately, these evolving strategies don’t just target Muslims, but may be replicated on a grander scale.

References

  1. ^ Facebook ad campaign (www.aljazeera.com)
  2. ^ condemned the campaign (www.timesofisrael.com)
  3. ^ the politics of race and identity online (doi.org)
  4. ^ newspapers (www.tandfonline.com)
  5. ^ television (journals.sagepub.com)
  6. ^ digital spaces (www.routledge.com)
  7. ^ Lawrence Pintak (murrow.wsu.edu)
  8. ^ published research on tweets that mentioned Omar during her campaign (doi.org)
  9. ^ the tweets they studied (doi.org)
  10. ^ researchers reported (doi.org)
  11. ^ bots (doi.org)
  12. ^ sockpuppets (doi.org)
  13. ^ a little over 200 million daily active users (www.statista.com)
  14. ^ nearly 2 billion (www.statista.com)
  15. ^ Johan Farkas (scholar.google.com)
  16. ^ “cloaked” Facebook pages (doi.org)
  17. ^ according to the study (doi.org)
  18. ^ “cloaked” pages (doi.org)
  19. ^ whiteness (doi.org)
  20. ^ “real” Islamist extremists (doi.org)
  21. ^ internet in general (doi.org)
  22. ^ social media in particular (doi.org)
  23. ^ a study (extremism.gwu.edu)
  24. ^ extremism expert J.M. Berger (www.jmberger.com)
  25. ^ a 2018 analysis (www.voxpol.eu)
  26. ^ less willing to police right-wing groups (www.wired.com)
  27. ^ Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images (www.gettyimages.com)
  28. ^ Experiments show that portrayals of Muslims as terrorists (doi.org)
  29. ^ the vandalization of mosques (projects.propublica.org)
  30. ^ burnings of the Quran (www.cnn.com)
  31. ^ continues to rise (www.npr.org)
  32. ^ “more frequently online than face-to-face.” (doi.org)
  33. ^ sued Facebook executives (muslimadvocates.org)
  34. ^ extensive Islamophobia network (www.americanprogress.org)
  35. ^ influence the presidential election (doi.org)

Read more https://theconversation.com/how-social-media-aided-by-bots-amplifies-islamophobia-online-166080

Times Magazine

CRO Tech Stack: A Technical Guide to Conversion Rate Optimization Tools

The fascinating thing is that the value of this website lies in the fact that creating a high-cali...

How Decentralised Applications Are Reshaping Enterprise Software in Australia

Australian businesses are experiencing a quiet revolution in how they manage data, execute agreeme...

Bambu Lab P2S 3D Printer Review: High-End Performance Meets Everyday Usability

After a full month of hands-on testing, the Bambu Lab P2S 3D printer has proven itself to be one...

Nearly Half of Disadvantaged Australian Schools Run Libraries on Less Than $1000 a Year

A new national snapshot from Dymocks Children’s Charities reveals outdated books, no librarians ...

Growing EV popularity is leading to queues at fast chargers. Could a kerbside charger network help?

The war on Iran has made crystal clear how shaky our reliance on fossil fuels is. It’s no surpri...

TRUCKIES UNDER THE PUMP AS FUEL PRICES BECOME TWO THIRDS OF OPERATING COSTS FOR SOME BUSINESS OWNERS

As Australia’s fuel crisis continues, truck drivers across the nation are being hit hard despite t...

The Times Features

Key Nutrients to Consider Before Pregnancy

Preparing for pregnancy often begins well before conception. Nutrition plays an important role durin...

When AI starts shopping for you, fashion may be enterin…

Fashion has always been a bit different to other industries. Consumers do not just buy because...

A Rare Arrival: F.P. Journe’s Vagabondage II Finds Its …

There are certain watches that don’t announce themselves loudly. They move quietly, between collec...

City of Sydney’s Australian Life photography competitio…

Focus on Australian life unfiltered  Amateur and professional photographers from across the count...

SWEET Announce ''The Final Blitz'' Australian Tour

Chanted vocals. Pounding drums. Infectious guitar riffs. Led by legendary guitarist Andy Scott...

Atlassian: What It Is, What It Does and Who Runs It

In an era where global technology giants are dominated by Silicon Valley, one of the most influe...

Mortgage Stress – it is happening. Here is what is driv…

Mortgage stress is no longer a fringe issue confined to a small group of overextended borrowers...

Mortgage Lending in Australia: Brokers vs Banks — Trust…

For most Australians, taking out a mortgage is the single largest financial decision they will e...

Building Costs in Australia: Permits, Taxes, Contributi…

Australia’s housing debate is often framed around supply and demand, interest rates, and populat...