The weaponization of web archives: Data craft and COVID-19 publics

Amelia Acker, Mitch Chaiet
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

An unprecedented volume of harmful health misinformation linked to the coronavirus pandemic has led to the appearance of misinformation tactics that leverage web archives in order to evade content moderation on social media platforms. Here we present newly identified manipulation techniques designed to maximize the value, longevity, and spread of harmful and non-factual content across social media using provenance information from web archives and social media analytics. After identifying conspiracy content that has been archived by human actors with the Wayback Machine, we report on user patterns of “screensampling,” where images of archived misinformation are spread via social platforms. We argue that archived web resources from the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine and subsequent screenshots contribute to the COVID-19 “misinfodemic” in platforms. Understanding these manipulation tactics that use sources from web archives reveals something vexing about information practices during pandemics—the desire to access reliable information even after it has been moderated and fact-checked, for some individuals, will give health misinformation and conspiracy theories more traction because it has been labeled as specious content by platforms.
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网络档案的武器化:数据工艺和COVID-19公众
与冠状病毒大流行有关的有害健康信息数量空前,导致利用网络档案来逃避社交媒体平台上的内容审核的错误信息策略出现。在这里,我们提出了新发现的操纵技术,旨在利用来自网络档案和社交媒体分析的来源信息,最大限度地提高社交媒体上有害和非事实内容的价值、寿命和传播。在确定了人类演员使用Wayback Machine存档的阴谋内容后,我们报告了“屏幕采样”的用户模式,即存档的错误信息的图像通过社交平台传播。我们认为,来自互联网档案馆Wayback Machine的存档网络资源以及随后的截图导致了平台上的COVID-19“错误信息”。了解这些利用网络档案来源的操纵策略,揭示了大流行期间信息实践中令人烦恼的一些事情——对一些人来说,即使在经过审核和事实核查后,也希望获得可靠的信息,这将给健康错误信息和阴谋论带来更多的吸引力,因为这些信息被平台贴上了似是而非的标签。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
20.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
10 weeks
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