As people rely on social media as their primary sources of news, the
spread of misinformation has become a significant concern. In this
large-scale study of news in social media we analyze eleven million
posts and investigate propagation behavior of users that directly
interact with news accounts identified as spreading trusted versus
malicious content. Unlike previous work, which looks at specific
rumors, topics, or events, we consider all content propagated by
various news sources. Moreover, we analyze and contrast population
versus sub-population behaviour (by demographics) when spreading
misinformation, and distinguish between two types of propagation,
i.e. direct retweets and mentions. Our evaluation examines how
evenly, how many, how quickly, and which users propagate content
from various types of news sources on Twitter.
Our analysis has identified several key differences in propagation
behavior from trusted versus suspicious news sources. These
include high inequity in the diffusion rate based on the source of
disinformation, with a small group of highly active users responsible
for the majority of disinformation spread overall and within each
demographic. Analysis by demographics showed that users with
lower annual income and education share more from disinformation
sources compared to their counterparts. News content is shared significantly
more quickly from trusted, conspiracy, and disinformation
sources compared to clickbait and propaganda. Older users propagate
news from trusted sources more quickly than younger users,
but they share from suspicious sources after longer delays. Finally,
users who interact with clickbait and conspiracy sources are likely
to share from propaganda accounts, but not the other way around.
Revised: June 28, 2019 |
Published: December 1, 2018
Citation
Glenski M.F., T. Weninger, and S. Volkova. 2018.Propagation From Deceptive News Sources Who Shares, How Much, How Evenly, and How Quickly?.IEEE Transactions on Computational Social Systems 5, no. 4:1071-1082.PNNL-SA-132311.doi:10.1109/TCSS.2018.2881071