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applegrove

(118,696 posts)
Thu Dec 24, 2015, 09:21 PM Dec 2015

Social Media, Revolution, and the Rise of the Political Bot

Social Media, Revolution, and the Rise of the Political Bot

http://politicalbots.org/?p=325

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Uprisings and protests worldwide, from the Arab Spring across North Africa and the Middle East to Euromaidan in the Ukraine, have made use of social media in creative ways. Activists use these online tools in efforts to mobilize, organize, and publicize their grievances. Yet scholars take differing positions on the effectiveness of social media as a mechanism for collective action. Many believe that platforms like Twitter and Facebook have played a crucial role in the toolkit of contemporary activism, and that these sites make group organization more efficient and effective. Others argue that using these sites adds little, and often exposes social movements to surveillance and censorship early in their formation. While some suggest social media have contributed to significant increases in civic engagement during contentious political situations, others contend that these networks are just as likely to be used for despotic purposes as they are to be used for democratic ones. This chapter covers the major debates over the use of social media during revolution and other political crises. The emergence of a new socially mediated tool of considerable political significance, the social media bot, is also explored. Powerful political actors are now harnessing bots—amalgamations of code that mimic users and produce content— for the purposes of online propaganda. We discuss the ways these bots have been used generally, and then move into the ways they are now being used politically. We contend that this computational propaganda is among the most significant consequences of the latest innovations in social media.

Woolley, Samuel C. and Philip N. Howard. “Social Media, Revolution, and the Rise of the Political Bot,” in the Routledge Handbook of Media, Conflict, and Security, edited by Romy Frolich and Piers Robinson. London, UK: Routledge, forthcoming.



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Social Media, Revolution, and the Rise of the Political Bot (Original Post) applegrove Dec 2015 OP
I've long thought that when you posted stuff on guns, immediately folk would show up applegrove Dec 2015 #1

applegrove

(118,696 posts)
1. I've long thought that when you posted stuff on guns, immediately folk would show up
Thu Dec 24, 2015, 09:24 PM
Dec 2015

with the same game plan to prove to you that you don't know enough about guns to say if they should be regulated. I'm sure they were real people. But it only took them a half hour to show up on mass. So a bot must have told them someone posted some anti gun message. Now we have gun control activism forum so there is not point in them fighting back there, as they would be banned. It will be interesting to see what journalists write about regarding bots and social media in the US election cycle.

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