EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Riga [Latvia]
NATO Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence
2018
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | BSB01 |
Beschreibung: | Generational change in malicious activity on social media seems to be at hand. Primitive bots indiscriminately promoting links to news sites are on the decline. They are being replaced by coordinated accounts that target conversations centred upon individual media outlets or members of different elites. In recent months on Twitter, the volume of automated content about NATO activity in the Baltics and Poland has declined at an increasingly rapid pace. The number of bottweets dropped by 15 percentage points for Russian and 20 percentage points for English. We infer that this reduction is best explained by changes introduced by the platform. Our findings are verified by drawing on thirty times more data than for previous Robotrolling issues. For the first time we include messages from VKontakte as a control. We see a marked rise in organised trolling activity conducted by humans using fake accounts compared to early 2017. As of January 2018, 50% of all Russian-language messages are directed at other Twitter users. As social media companies intervene to clean up automation, they should take care that changes they introduce may enable new forms of manipulation. Russian language bot activity is in decline in absolute terms, but Twitter in Russian remains more polluted than Twitter in English |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource(1 p. 6) |
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500 | |a Generational change in malicious activity on social media seems to be at hand. Primitive bots indiscriminately promoting links to news sites are on the decline. They are being replaced by coordinated accounts that target conversations centred upon individual media outlets or members of different elites. In recent months on Twitter, the volume of automated content about NATO activity in the Baltics and Poland has declined at an increasingly rapid pace. The number of bottweets dropped by 15 percentage points for Russian and 20 percentage points for English. We infer that this reduction is best explained by changes introduced by the platform. Our findings are verified by drawing on thirty times more data than for previous Robotrolling issues. For the first time we include messages from VKontakte as a control. We see a marked rise in organised trolling activity conducted by humans using fake accounts compared to early 2017. As of January 2018, 50% of all Russian-language messages are directed at other Twitter users. As social media companies intervene to clean up automation, they should take care that changes they introduce may enable new forms of manipulation. Russian language bot activity is in decline in absolute terms, but Twitter in Russian remains more polluted than Twitter in English | ||
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id | DE-604.BV048262036 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T19:59:35Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:33:25Z |
institution | BVB |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033642239 |
oclc_num | 1334039677 |
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owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | 1 Online-Ressource(1 p. 6) |
psigel | ZDB-45-CGR BSB_OE_CEEOL |
publishDate | 2018 |
publishDateSearch | 2018 |
publishDateSort | 2018 |
publisher | NATO Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence |
record_format | marc |
spelling | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 Specified No Author Riga [Latvia] NATO Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence 2018 Frankfurt M. CEEOL 2018 1 Online-Ressource(1 p. 6) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Generational change in malicious activity on social media seems to be at hand. Primitive bots indiscriminately promoting links to news sites are on the decline. They are being replaced by coordinated accounts that target conversations centred upon individual media outlets or members of different elites. In recent months on Twitter, the volume of automated content about NATO activity in the Baltics and Poland has declined at an increasingly rapid pace. The number of bottweets dropped by 15 percentage points for Russian and 20 percentage points for English. We infer that this reduction is best explained by changes introduced by the platform. Our findings are verified by drawing on thirty times more data than for previous Robotrolling issues. For the first time we include messages from VKontakte as a control. We see a marked rise in organised trolling activity conducted by humans using fake accounts compared to early 2017. As of January 2018, 50% of all Russian-language messages are directed at other Twitter users. As social media companies intervene to clean up automation, they should take care that changes they introduce may enable new forms of manipulation. Russian language bot activity is in decline in absolute terms, but Twitter in Russian remains more polluted than Twitter in English Politics Media studies Communication studies International relations/trade Security and defense Social psychology and group interaction Evaluation research ICT Information and Communications Technologies Peace and Conflict Studies |
spellingShingle | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 Politics Media studies Communication studies International relations/trade Security and defense Social psychology and group interaction Evaluation research ICT Information and Communications Technologies Peace and Conflict Studies |
title | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 |
title_auth | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 |
title_exact_search | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 |
title_exact_search_txtP | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 |
title_full | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 Specified No Author |
title_fullStr | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 Specified No Author |
title_full_unstemmed | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 Specified No Author |
title_short | EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. ROBOTROLLING 2018/1 |
title_sort | executive summary robotrolling 2018 1 |
topic | Politics Media studies Communication studies International relations/trade Security and defense Social psychology and group interaction Evaluation research ICT Information and Communications Technologies Peace and Conflict Studies |
topic_facet | Politics Media studies Communication studies International relations/trade Security and defense Social psychology and group interaction Evaluation research ICT Information and Communications Technologies Peace and Conflict Studies |