Listen to what they say: Better understand and detect online misinformation with user feedback

10/31/2022
by   Hubert Etienne, et al.
0

Social media users who report content are key allies in the management of online misinformation, however, no research has been conducted yet to understand their role and the different trends underlying their reporting activity. We suggest an original approach to studying misinformation: examining it from the reporting users perspective at the content-level and comparatively across regions and platforms. We propose the first classification of reported content pieces, resulting from a review of c. 9,000 items reported on Facebook and Instagram in France, the UK, and the US in June 2020. This allows us to observe meaningful distinctions regarding reporting content between countries and platforms as it significantly varies in volume, type, topic, and manipulation technique. Examining six of these techniques, we identify a novel one that is specific to Instagram US and significantly more sophisticated than others, potentially presenting a concrete challenge for algorithmic detection and human moderation. We also identify four reporting behaviours, from which we derive four types of noise capable of explaining half of the inaccuracy found in content reported as misinformation. We finally show that breaking down the user reporting signal into a plurality of behaviours allows to train a simple, although competitive, classifier on a small dataset with a combination of basic users-reports to classify the different types of reported content pieces.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 10

page 11

page 12

page 13

page 14

research
05/13/2015

Reporting, Reviewing, and Responding to Harassment on Twitter

When people experience harassment online, from individual threats or inv...
research
06/23/2021

Reporting Revenge Porn: a Preliminary Expert Analysis

In our research, we focus on the response to the non-consensual distribu...
research
04/24/2019

A Decade of Mal-Activity Reporting: A Retrospective Analysis of Internet Malicious Activity Blacklists

This paper focuses on reporting of Internet malicious activity (or mal-a...
research
04/22/2021

Barriers and Opportunities to Accessible Social Media Content Authoring

User-generated content plays a key role in social networking, allowing a...
research
05/08/2023

A mimetic approach to social influence on Instagram

We combine philosophical theories with quantitative analyses of online d...
research
11/11/2022

Bandits for Online Calibration: An Application to Content Moderation on Social Media Platforms

We describe the current content moderation strategy employed by Meta to ...
research
04/19/2022

Equity in Resident Crowdsourcing: Measuring Under-reporting without Ground Truth Data

Modern city governance relies heavily on crowdsourcing (or "co-productio...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset