<https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/oct/22/twitter-admits-bias-in-algorithm-for-rightwing-politicians-and-news-outlets>

Twitter has admitted it amplifies more tweets from rightwing politicians and 
news outlets than content from leftwing sources.

The social media platform examined tweets from elected officials in seven 
countries – the UK, US, Canada, France, Germany, Spain and Japan. It also 
studied whether political content from news organisations was amplified on 
Twitter, focusing primarily on US news sources such as Fox News, the New York 
Times and BuzzFeed.

The study compared Twitter’s “Home” timeline – the default way its 200 million 
users are served tweets, in which an algorithm tailors what users see – with 
the traditional chronological timeline where the most recent tweets are ranked 
first.

The research found that in six out of seven countries, apart from Germany, 
tweets from rightwing politicians received more amplification from the 
algorithm than those from the left; right-leaning news organisations were more 
amplified than those on the left; and generally politicians’ tweets were more 
amplified by an algorithmic timeline than by the chronological timeline.

According to a 27-page research document, Twitter found a “statistically 
significant difference favouring the political right wing” in all the countries 
except Germany. Under the research, a value of 0% meant tweets reached the same 
number of users on the algorithm-tailored timeline as on its chronological 
counterpart, whereas a value of 100% meant tweets achieved double the reach. On 
this basis, the most powerful discrepancy between right and left was in Canada 
(Liberals 43%; Conservatives 167%), followed by the UK (Labour 112%; 
Conservatives 176%). Even excluding top government officials, the results were 
similar, the document said.

Twitter said it wasn’t clear why its Home timeline produced these results and 
indicated that it may now need to change its algorithm. A blog post by Rumman 
Chowdhury, Twitter’s director of software engineering, and Luca Belli, a 
Twitter researcher, said the findings could be “problematic” and that more 
study needed to be done. The post acknowledged that it was concerning if 
certain tweets received preferential treatment as a result of the way in which 
users interacted with the algorithm tailoring their timeline.

“Algorithmic amplification is problematic if there is preferential treatment as 
a function of how the algorithm is constructed versus the interactions people 
have with it. Further root cause analysis is required in order to determine 
what, if any, changes are required to reduce adverse impacts by our Home 
timeline algorithm,” the post said.

Twitter said it would make its research available to outsiders such as 
academics and it is preparing to let third parties have wider access to its 
data, in a move likely to put further pressure on Facebook to do the same. 
Facebook is being urged by politicians on both sides of the Atlantic to 
distribute its research to third parties after tens of thousands of internal 
documents – which included revelations that the company knew its Instagram app 
damaged teenage mental health – were leaked by the whistleblower Frances Haugen.

The Twitter study compared the two ways in which a user can view their 
timeline: the first uses an algorithm to provide a tailored view of tweets that 
the user might be interested in based on the accounts they interact with most 
and other factors; the other is the more traditional timeline in which the user 
reads the most recent posts in reverse chronological order.

The study compared the two types of timeline by considering whether some 
politicians, political parties or news outlets were more amplified than others. 
The study analysed millions of tweets from elected officials between 1 April 
and 15 August 2020 and hundreds of millions of tweets from news organisations, 
largely in the US, over the same period.

Twitter said it would make its research available to third parties but said 
privacy concerns prevented it from making available the “raw data”. The post 
said: “We are making aggregated datasets available for third party researchers 
who wish to reproduce our main findings and validate our methodology, upon 
request.”

Twitter added that it was preparing to make internal data available to external 
sources on a regular basis. The company said its machine-learning ethics, 
transparency and accountability team was finalising plans in a way that would 
protect user privacy.

“This approach is new and hasn’t been used at this scale, but we are optimistic 
that it will address the privacy-vs-accountability tradeoffs that can hinder 
algorithmic transparency,” said Twitter. “We’re excited about the opportunities 
this work may unlock for future collaboration with external researchers looking 
to reproduce, validate and extend our internal research.”
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