Crowdfunding platforms as conduits for ideological struggle and extremism: On the need for greater regulation and digital constitutionalism

IF 4.1 1区 文学 Q1 COMMUNICATION Policy and Internet Pub Date : 2023-09-24 DOI:10.1002/poi3.369
Matthew Wade, Stephanie A. Baker, Michael J. Walsh
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Abstract

Abstract Crowdfunding platforms remain understudied as conduits for ideological struggle. While other social media platforms may enable the expression of hateful and harmful ideas, crowdfunding can actively facilitate their enaction through financial support. In addressing such risks, crowdfunding platforms attempt to mitigate complicity but retain legitimacy . That is, ensuring their fundraising tools are not exploited for intolerant, violent or hate‐based purposes, yet simultaneously avoiding restrictive policies that undermine their legitimacy as ‘open’ platforms. Although social media platforms are routinely scrutinized for enabling misinformation, hateful rhetoric and extremism, crowdfunding has largely escaped critical inquiry, despite being repeatedly implicated in amplifying such threats. Drawing on the ‘Freedom Convoy’ movement as a case study, this article employs critical discourse analysis to trace how crowdfunding platforms reveal their underlying values in privileging either collective safety or personal liberty when hosting divisive causes. The radically different policy decisions adopted by crowdfunding platforms GoFundMe and GiveSendGo expose a concerning divide between ‘Big Tech’ and ‘Alt‐Tech’ platforms regarding what harms they are willing to risk, and the ideological rationales through which these determinations are made. There remain relatively few regulatory safeguards guiding such impactful strategic choices, leaving crowdfunding platforms susceptible to weaponization. With Alt‐Tech platforms aspiring to build an ‘alternative internet’, this paper highlights the urgent need to explore digital constitutionalism in the crowdfunding space, establishing firmer boundaries to better mitigate fundraising platforms becoming complicit in catastrophic harms.
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众筹平台是意识形态斗争和极端主义的渠道:论加强监管和数字宪政的必要性
众筹平台作为意识形态斗争的渠道仍未得到充分研究。虽然其他社交媒体平台可能会表达仇恨和有害的想法,但众筹可以通过财政支持积极促进它们的实施。为了解决这些风险,众筹平台试图减少共谋,但保留合法性。也就是说,确保他们的筹款工具不被用于不宽容、暴力或基于仇恨的目的,同时避免限制性政策破坏他们作为“开放”平台的合法性。尽管社交媒体平台经常因助长虚假信息、仇恨言论和极端主义而受到审查,但众筹在很大程度上逃脱了严厉的调查,尽管它一再被指放大了这些威胁。本文以“自由车队”(Freedom Convoy)运动为例,运用批判性话语分析来追踪众筹平台在主持分裂事业时,是如何揭示其对集体安全和个人自由的特权的潜在价值的。众筹平台GoFundMe和GiveSendGo所采取的截然不同的政策决定,暴露了“大科技”和“另类科技”平台之间的分歧,即他们愿意冒什么样的风险,以及做出这些决定的意识形态依据。指导这种有影响力的战略选择的监管保障相对较少,这使得众筹平台容易被武器化。随着Alt - Tech平台渴望建立一个“替代互联网”,本文强调了在众筹领域探索数字宪政的迫切需要,建立更严格的界限,以更好地减轻筹款平台成为灾难性危害的同谋。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.20%
发文量
51
期刊介绍: Understanding public policy in the age of the Internet requires understanding how individuals, organizations, governments and networks behave, and what motivates them in this new environment. Technological innovation and internet-mediated interaction raise both challenges and opportunities for public policy: whether in areas that have received much work already (e.g. digital divides, digital government, and privacy) or newer areas, like regulation of data-intensive technologies and platforms, the rise of precarious labour, and regulatory responses to misinformation and hate speech. We welcome innovative research in areas where the Internet already impacts public policy, where it raises new challenges or dilemmas, or provides opportunities for policy that is smart and equitable. While we welcome perspectives from any academic discipline, we look particularly for insight that can feed into social science disciplines like political science, public administration, economics, sociology, and communication. We welcome articles that introduce methodological innovation, theoretical development, or rigorous data analysis concerning a particular question or problem of public policy.
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