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posted by chromas on Tuesday August 27 2019, @02:44PM   Printer-friendly
from the internet-hate-machine dept.

Researchers propose a new approach for dismantling online hate networks

How do you get rid of hate speech on social platforms? Until now, companies have generally tried two approaches. One is to ban individual users who are caught posting abuse; the other is to ban the large pages and groups where people who practice hate speech organize and promote their noxious views.

But what if this approach is counterproductive? That's the argument in an intriguing new paper out today in Nature from Neil Johnson, a professor of physics at George Washington University, and researchers at GW and the University of Miami. The paper, "Hidden resilience and adaptive dynamics of the global online hate ecology," explores how hate groups organize on Facebook and Russian social network VKontakte — and how they resurrect themselves after platforms ban them.

As Noemi Derzsy writes in her summary in Nature:

Johnson et al. show that online hate groups are organized in highly resilient clusters. The users in these clusters are not geographically localized, but are globally interconnected by 'highways' that facilitate the spread of online hate across different countries, continents and languages. When these clusters are attacked — for example, when hate groups are removed by social-media platform administrators (Fig. 1) — the clusters rapidly rewire and repair themselves, and strong bonds are made between clusters, formed by users shared between them, analogous to covalent chemical bonds. In some cases, two or more small clusters can even merge to form a large cluster, in a process the authors liken to the fusion of two atomic nuclei. Using their mathematical model, the authors demonstrated that banning hate content on a single platform aggravates online hate ecosystems and promotes the creation of clusters that are not detectable by platform policing (which the authors call 'dark pools'), where hate content can thrive unchecked.

[...] The researchers advocate a four-step approach to reduce the influence of hate networks.

  1. Identify smaller, more isolated clusters of hate speech and ban those users instead.
  2. Instead of wiping out entire small clusters, ban small samples from each cluster at random. This would theoretically weaken the cluster over time without inflaming the entire hive.
  3. Recruit users opposed to hate speech to engage with members of the larger hate clusters directly. (The authors explain: "In our data, some white supremacists call for a unified Europe under a Hitler-like regime, and others oppose a united Europe. Similar in-fighting exists between hate-clusters of the KKK movement. Adding a third population in a pre-engineered format then allows the hate-cluster extinction time to be manipulated globally.)
  4. Identify hate groups with competing views and pit them against one another, in an effort to sow doubt in the minds of participants.

Hidden resilience and adaptive dynamics of the global online hate ecology[$], Nature (DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1494-7)


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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 27 2019, @02:52PM (4 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 27 2019, @02:52PM (#886102)

    You can't legislate morality, but you can just kill and silence anyone you disagree with.

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  • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Tuesday August 27 2019, @05:43PM (1 child)

    by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday August 27 2019, @05:43PM (#886247) Journal

    A "kinder, gentler" fascism than the fascism you are opposed to.

    --
    To transfer files: right-click on file, pick Copy. Unplug mouse, plug mouse into other computer. Right-click, paste.
    • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Tuesday August 27 2019, @05:54PM

      by ikanreed (3164) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday August 27 2019, @05:54PM (#886264) Journal

      I mean... that's literally the philosophical basis of good governance if you believe Hobbes or Locke.

  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by DeathMonkey on Tuesday August 27 2019, @09:35PM

    by DeathMonkey (1380) on Tuesday August 27 2019, @09:35PM (#886414) Journal

    You can't legislate morality, but you can just kill and silence anyone you disagree with.

    Good thing Twitter saying GTFO my server neither kills, nor silences, anyone. They retain their lives. They retain their right to free speech (they just don't get to do it on Twitter's property).

    You know what does kill and silence people: Rightwing terrorists murdering them.

  • (Score: 2) by rylyeh on Wednesday August 28 2019, @04:48AM

    by rylyeh (6726) <kadathNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday August 28 2019, @04:48AM (#886645)

    Ya, That never works out.
    Something about killing people and not an idea.
    Perhaps lighting yourself on fire in protest would convince me of how devoted you are to your idiom.
    I hope you are able to become a great pundit, or prosecutor some day.

    And take that poster of Lyndon Larouche off your bedroom wall. It's kinda - well - sad.

    --
    "a vast crenulate shell wherein rode the grey and awful form of primal Nodens, Lord of the Great Abyss."