Sunday, April 2, 2023

Media (1)

What is Media Manipulation?

02/03/2021

12-1 p.m.

Register to join via Zoom

The Just Infrastructures Speaker Series, sponsored in part by the Department of Journalism, Department of Media & Cinema Studies, and the Institute of Communications Research, hosts "What is Media Manipulation?" presented by Joan Donovan of Harvard University.

Abstract: Journalists face a barrage of information and they must make choices about which stories to cover based on available source materials. Some stories, though, are just that, stories. Our research maps and tracks attempts by “media manipulators” to influence journalists and bait them into picking up false stories. During breaking news events, media manipulators act quickly to establish their narratives by creating and seeding content in order to trick journalists into covering specific highly politicized wedge issues. Manipulators often rely on the speed and ubiquity of social media, which has quickened the pace of news, to make wide scale distribution of polarizing hoaxes possible. Manipulation campaigns are planned and executed across multiple platforms online simultaneously in an effort to capture a wide audience of both everyday users and to ensnare journalists. Broadly, we refer to these tactics as “source hacking,” a versatile set of techniques for feeding false information to journalists, investigators, and the general public during breaking news events or across highly polarized wedge issues.

Source: https://media.illinois.edu/node/1072