Bots actually target and pursue individual influencers
21 Nov 2018
New research co-authored by assistant research professor and associate director of Informatics at the University of Southern California Department of Computer Science, Emilio Ferrara, looked at "social hacking" over social networks that can increase violent commentary and can affect voting behaviour.
- The authors' findings contrast with earlier studies assuming bots were sharing information without specific strategies
- Bots, the researchers say, are selecting and pursuing specific targets
- Bots tend to generate negative content aimed at polarizing highly influential human users to exacerbate social conflict
- Looking at the election in Spain, it was determined human influencers who were targeted by bots, did not recognise they were being targeted and being bombarded by non-human actors
- "As we study this events, bots are so pervasive that anyone can be a target."
- "Every user is exposed to this either directly or indirectly because bot-generated content is nowadays very pervasive"
- "This is so endemic in online social systems... no one can tell if they are being manipulated."
- We need beyond the technical solutions to this problem. We need regulation, laws and incentives that will force social media companies to regulate their platforms."