[<<Social media analysis suggested that right-wing networks are much more
organised than on the left, pushing nationalistic fake stories further.

***There was also an overlap of fake news sources on Twitter and support
networks of Prime Minister Narendra Modi*** [emphasis added].

The findings come from extensive research in India, Kenya, and Nigeria into
the way ordinary citizens engage with and spread fake news.>>

Pls. visit the original site for graphics.]

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-46146877?fbclid=IwAR3T1E84xKkKy7jQ_yfgWCogPeUb5juGJeRdW8WjY-xHzq5-6AgPhlBLsnI

Nationalism a driving force behind fake news in India, research shows

6 hours ago

Image copyrightBLOOMBERG
Image caption
Researchers gained unprecedented access to participants' phones to follow
sharing behaviours

*A rising tide of nationalism in India is driving ordinary citizens to
spread fake news, according to BBC research.*

The research found that facts were less important to some than the
emotional desire to bolster national identity.

Social media analysis suggested that right-wing networks are much more
organised than on the left, pushing nationalistic fake stories further.

There was also an overlap of fake news sources on Twitter and support
networks of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The findings come from extensive research in India, Kenya, and Nigeria into
the way ordinary citizens engage with and spread fake news.

All the latest from the BBC conference
Participants gave the BBC extensive access to their phones over a seven-day
period, allowing the researchers to examine the kinds of material they
shared, whom they shared it with and how often.

The research, commissioned by the BBC World Service and published today,
forms part of "Beyond Fake News" - a series across TV, radio and digital
that aims to investigate how disinformation and fake news are affecting
people around the world.

In all three countries, distrust of mainstream news outlets pushed people
to spread information from alternative sources, without attempting to
verify it, in the belief that they were helping to spread the real story.
People were also overly confident in their ability to spot fake news.

The sheer flood of digital information being spread in 2018 is worsening
the problem. Participants in the BBC research made little attempt to query
the original source of fake news messages, looking instead to alternative
signs that the information was reliable.

These included the number of comments on a Facebook post, the kinds of
images on the posts, or the sender, with people assuming WhatsApp messages
from family and friends could be trusted and sent on without checking.

Widespread sharing of false rumours on WhatsApp has led to a wave of
violence in India, with people forwarding on fake messages about child
abductors to friends and family out of a sense of duty to protect loved
ones and communities.


Media captionThe digital epidemic killing Indians
According to a separate BBC analysis, at least 32 people have been killed
in the past year in incidents involving rumours spread on social media or
messaging apps.

We examined one case in detail - the deaths of Nilotpal and Abhishek in
Assam - while another reporter travelled to Mexico to see how WhatsApp
rumours fuelled similar deadly violence there.

The research in Africa suggested that national identity was insignificant
in the spread of fake news.

In Kenya, scams related to money and technology were a stronger driving
force, contributing to around a third of stories shared on WhatsApp, while
fake stories relating to terrorism and the army were widely shared in
Nigeria.

A year in fake news in Africa
In both countries, health scares were prominent among widely shared fake
news stories, and many news consumers visited both credible and fake news
sources without distinguishing between them.

Researchers spent hundreds of hours with 80 participants across the three
countries, interviewing them at home about their media consumption as well
as examining how they shared information via WhatsApp and Facebook during a
seven-day period.

They also conducted extensive analysis of how fake news spreads on Twitter
and Facebook in India, to understand whether the spread of fake news was
politically polarised.

About 16,000 Twitter accounts and 3,000 Facebook pages were analysed. The
results showed a strong and coherent promotion of right-wing messages,
while left-wing fake news networks were loosely organised, if at all, and
less effective.

The methodology
By Santanu Chakrabarti

We set out with this research to try to answer the question of why ordinary
citizens spread fake news - a little-understood part of the fake news
equation.

When a phenomenon is new or not very well understood, qualitative research
techniques are useful. These techniques - in this case, in-depth interviews
and up-close observation of sharing behaviours - allowed us to explore fake
news with nuance, richness and depth.

Because we wanted to know what was spreading in encrypted private networks
such as WhatsApp, ethnographic approaches - visiting people at home - were
essential.

This is the first known research project in these countries that uses these
methods to understand the fake news phenomenon at the level of ordinary
citizens.

It is also the first to use data science and network analysis techniques to
understand how known sources of fake news are organised on Twitter and
Facebook, and what their connections are with audiences.

This story is part of a series by the BBC on disinformation and fake news -
a global problem challenging the way we share information and perceive the
world around us.

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