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What Comes After Disinformation?

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What Comes After Disinformation?

It may be time for a new approach to disinformation studies

Kathryn Peters
Jan 27
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What Comes After Disinformation?

citap.substack.com

On May 25th 2022, media and communication scholars met at Sciences Po in Paris for a pre-conference before the annual conference of the International Communication Association (ICA) to discuss the question, “What comes after disinformation studies?”

This week, we’re proud to release a special issue of the Bulletin of Technology and Public Life offering 11 articles that take up the question of “what comes after disinformation studies” from many angles. As the pieces in this collection show, it may be time for disinformation studies to fade away—or become something new.

Chris Anderson and Théophile Lenoir note in their introductory essay,

“The problem is twofold. First, disinformation studies has generally lacked analyses of power and interest… Second, the real problem underlying informational politics in many countries are powerful groups seeking to hold on to their political, social, economic, and cultural advantages in the face of increasingly powerful challenges to that power.”

Read the issue

Several pieces take on the “infocentric” nature of the current discussion to consider instead issues of style, distraction, ignorance, context, and state violence.

Another recurring theme is the importance of understanding disinformation in non-Western contexts, with pieces exploring disinformation in a Vietnamese context and information disorder across Mali, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Senegal, and the Sahel.

Finally, these scholars grapple with how we define democracy in a world with disinformation, centering questions of power, moral claims, inequality, race and ethnicity, and conflict.

So, what does come after disinformation studies? Anderson and Lenoir offer a clear call to regulators and others seeking to build more just, resilient democracies:

“Technical solutions to political problems are bound to fail. Historical, structural, and political inequality—and especially race, ethnicity, and social difference—needs to be at the forefront of our understanding of politics and, indeed, disinformation.”

Read the issue

Reinstating Trump’s Facebook account

When the Oversight Board asked for comments on Facebook’s decision to ban former President Trump’s accounts, CITAP submitted a comment. We noted then that:

The grounds for removing the former president from the platform permanently in the context of Facebook’s Community Standards are clear. Facebook’s actions follow the company's history of suspending users who repeatedly violate policies… We also believe his permanent ban is more than justified given the former president’s repeated violations of Facebook’s Community Standards, the ongoing threat to U.S. democratic institutions including the public’s exercise of voice at the ballot box, and ongoing potential for violence.

This week, as Meta announced that it will allow Trump to return to its platforms, Deen Freelon made the case for why this is still a bad idea (thread):

Twitter avatar for @dfreelon
Deen Freelon @dfreelon
I'm extremely uncomfortable with the idea that running for office allows politicians to say things that would get "normal" users banned. If a platform has terms of service, they should be applied consistently across the board, no exceptions
5:42 PM ∙ Jan 26, 2023
27Likes7Retweets

👏

Congratulations to Tressie McMillan Cottom on being recognized with Brandeis University’s Gittler Prize, awarded for outstanding and lasting scholarly contributions to racial, ethnic and/or religious relations.

Publications and appearances

Curious how TikTok plans to continue operating in the United States? Affiliate Matt Perault and Samm Sacks have details: “The cornerstone feature of Project Texas is a new subsidiary: TikTok U.S. Data Security Inc. (USDS). TikTok established USDS in July 2022. The new entity houses the functions of TikTok’s business that are most likely to give rise to national security concerns, such as access to U.S. citizen data and decisions on content moderation.”

"Well documented inequalities associated with institutional prejudice and social filters shape who can work with [large language models], as well as the tacit assumptions that guide decision-making." Affiliate Scott Timcke takes up a justice-based critique of ChatGPT for TechPolicyPress.

Coming soon

January 31: The Center on Tech Policy will be hosting a webinar panel discussion on the state of state platform regulation. Zoom registration.

February 3: Alice Marwick and Bruce Mutsvairo in conversation on studying online radicalization and disinformation, hosted by the Rutgers Digital Ethnography Working Group. Virtual, 1-2:30pm. Registration and details.

February 3: Alice Marwick, Chad Bryant, Heesoo Jang, and Shashank Srivastava talk ChatGPT in Context—3:00 pm, University Room, Hyde Hall, UNC Campus.

February 10: The spring speaker series continues with a panel on Digital Governance in the Global South, featuring Sareeta Amrute and Chinmayi Arun in conversation with Nanditha Narayanamoorthy. 11am ET, virtual. Details and registration.

February 14-17: The University of Florida’s Frank gathering, where Francesca Tripodi will be participating alongside other amazing speakers. Event information and registration.

March 9 & 10: The virtual QAnon Research Conference. Event invitation and registration.

May 30, 2023: Release date for Alice Marwick’s The Private Is Political: Networked Privacy and Social Media.

Rest of Web

On our future reads shelf:

Twitter avatar for @PabloBochon
Pablo J. Boczkowski @PabloBochon
It all began with a conversation with @moramatassi at a coffee shop in Buenos Aires during winter 2018. After two years of research and another two of writing, our book will be published on April 18 by @mitpress. Special thanks to @sylviamath for her unfailing support.
Image
12:34 PM ∙ Jan 25, 2023
230Likes28Retweets

On our current to-read list:

Twitter avatar for @datasociety
Data & Society @datasociety
📣 New release! @moiragweigel tells the story of a group of hidden intermediaries who have played key roles in making Amazon one of the most powerful corporations in the world: third-party sellers. datasociety.net/library/amazon… 1/6
datasociety.netAmazon’s Trickle-Down MonopolyIn this report, Moira Weigel tells the story of a group of hidden intermediaries who have played key roles in making Amazon one of the most powerful corporations in the world, while remaining mostly invisible to customers: third-party (3P) sellers.
4:04 PM ∙ Jan 25, 2023
73Likes40Retweets

And a great summer opportunity:

Twitter avatar for @chris_bail
Chris Bail (post.news/chrisbail) @chris_bail
🚨🚨🚨Announcing the 2023 SUMMER INSTITUTES IN COMPUTATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE 🚨🚨🚨 This program will run in 28 locations around the globe this year! Learn more (and apply) at: sicss.io/locations
Image
8:06 PM ∙ Jan 19, 2023
642Likes288Retweets

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