Showing posts with label Fake News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fake News. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Social Media Myths YOU Should Know?


Seven Myths of The Social Media Age



The internet was expected to renew democracy, tackle the hegemony of the monopoly news providers and draw us all into a global community.

Over the past six months, that idea has been undermined by a new myth which suggests that democracy is, in fact, being overturned by the spawn of the internet: Russian bots and fake news – and that news organizations are losing their power to keep people informed.

There is no evidence to suggest that made-up stories from fake news sites have had any significant impact.

The BBC and the mainstream media are still our major sources of information both on and offline.



Research during the EU referendum campaign for example found that, of all Twitter links analyzed, 63.9% led to stories from professional news organizations. Junk news made up around 5% of the total and there was “little evidence of Russian content”.

1. The Has Improved Democracy

The internet was supposed to do this by breaking up the media monopolies and allowing everyone to join the conversation. However the internet always boosts the most popular voice in every niche, so the biggest news providers are still the most read, and small news publications struggle for funds. More than 200 local newspapers have closed in the UK since 2015.

Certainly there is more choice if you look for it, but the biggest concern is the number of people across the world who have simply tuned out altogether and choose to watch kittens and comedy rather than news.



2. We Are All Journalists Now

We can all broadcast from our smart phones, but mostly we share pictures of our children. The effect of digital disruption has been that the media landscape is becoming more concentrated and the number of paid journalists is dropping as “legacy” media organizations struggle with falling revenues. But audience members have not replaced them – those smart phone witness reports, tweeted by passers-by, would vanish into the ether if they were not found and shared by a diminishing number of paid journalists.

On the other hand, the internet has created an army of social media “influencers” who, if they are canny, turn themselves into “brands” which they leverage online to recommend – or sell – everything from make up to luxury cars in return for payment in kind or cash. Meanwhile, the few genuinely new voices being created online rise and fall as they have always done, clinging to the margins and hoping to get noticed in the mad rush of information.



3. The Many Are Smarter Than The Few

Books with titles such as The Wisdom of Crowds have suggested that the internet would lead to a form of pure direct democracy because, if you ask enough people a question, the answer will always be correct.

But this naive optimism did not factor in the myriad ways in which people (or in this case their data) could be manipulated. In countries with no reliable and trusted source of mainstream news, people make money by inventing stories tailored to press buttons of fear and prejudice.

In the US, where news has become highly polarized and mainstream news has lost the trust of large swaths of voters, researchers studying the swing state of Michigan, found stories categorized as fake news were just as likely to be shared as news from professional sources in the election period of 2016.

But fake news is not the preserve of junk-news factories. In late February, The Sun removed from its site an entirely specious article about savings to be made from Brexit after a mauling by economist Jonathan Portes.



But by that time the story had already been retweeted by leading Conservative Brexiteer, Jacob Rees-Mogg, to his 121,000 followers. Rees-Mogg has not (to date) corrected or apologized for his tweet – but then he only follows five people so he may not know about his error.

4. The Internet Has Produced A 'Global Village'

The “global village” was the brainchild of American media scholar Marshal McLuhan who – as early as 1964 – expounded the idea that in the electronic age, everyone would have access to the same information through technology. This would seem to have been borne out by the internet.

But evidence suggests that the centralizing tendency of monopoly global media is growing. A tiny number of companies including Facebook and Google are now the gatekeepers to information across the world – and they are nearly all American. And, in emerging economies and authoritarian states, the hopes about democratizing social movements are being undone by the growing incursion of government propaganda into the online space.



5. The Internet Brings Us Together

There is much to be grateful for in the ways in which the internet and social media allow us to communicate laterally. It takes only seconds to communicate to thousands via WhatApp and minutes to produce a petition and upload it to Facebook. What is less certain is its ability to unite people across the boundaries of personal affiliation and to encourage genuine debate.

American researchers Michael Beam, Myiah Hutchens and Jay Hmielowski tried to pick apart the different effects of reading online newspapers and sharing material on social media. They found that reading online, like reading offline, increases knowledge – but, on social media, people may share without reading. This may be partly why some scholars fear that political polarization goes hand-in-hand with rising use of social media.

6. Nobody Trusts The Mainstream Media

When asked whether they trust the media, the tendency in many countries is to say no – but when asked whether they trust their favourite news outlet, trust levels rise dramatically. However in northern Europe, one factor stands out: people trust their traditional media more than they trust online and social media news sources. More importantly public broadcasting tends to be trusted across the political spectrum drawing people together rather than splitting them apart.



7. The New 'Digital Generation'

Here is the biggest myth of them all – that there is a new digital generation that is mistrustful of mainstream news and busy creating a more democratic, and less “dutiful”, “self-actualising” future. It is reassuring to think that young people have the answers and will usher in the newer, nicer world that their elders failed to produce. But none of us is born digital. Young people are no more instinctively able to navigate online than they would be able to drive a car without lessons. Exploration alone won’t teach young people how to sort out misinformation and propaganda from facts.

Guest Authored By Angela Phillips. Angela teaches at Goldsmiths, University of London. She is the author of: Journalism in Context (2014), Routledge, co-author of Changing Journalism (2011), Routledge and the author of Good Writing for Journalists (2007) Sage. She launched www.eastlondonlines.co.uk a local, multi-media, news website that is run by Goldsmiths journalism students and has a significant local audience. She has been a journalist for over thirty years, starting in the alternative press of the 1970s and moving on to work for national newspapers, magazines, television and radio. She trained initially as a photographer and worked for several years as a photojournalist before moving into print and online media. More recently, she has moved into the arena of journalism research, working with the Goldsmiths Leverhulme Media Research Centre. She is also the chair of the Ethics Committee of the Coordinating Committee for Media Reform and gave evidence to the Leveson enquiry into the press. Follow Angela on Twitter.





"As my Norwegian co-author Eiri Elvestad and I discuss in a new book, Misunderstanding News Audiences, seven myths of the social media age, technology is changing our democracy – but we are not helpless in the face of it, nor are we liberated by it.

As with previous major technical shifts, we are in the processing of adapting it to our needs and that process varies according to who we are and where we live.

Democracy will be strengthened if we learn how to use the internet wisely.

If we leave it to the winds of the free market we may indeed find that it overwhelms us.."


    • Authored by:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

    Monday, November 20, 2017

    YOUR Social Media Public Relations?


    Earlier this year while doing a media tour for my new book on public relations at TV stations in Cincinnati, Sacramento and Las Vegas, all three hosts asked the same two questions:

    1. Is social media more effective than traditional media?

    2. Does the election of Donald Trump prove the superiority of social media?



    The answers seemed to surprise them: No and No. Public relations is the Persuasion Business.

    In the book and for this column, I focus on how PR can be used to influence the media, clients, employees and various audiences. In most cases, traditional media – along with third-party validation from experts – beats social media by a wide margin.

    First, Trump.. Social media works great if you are already famous. The Top 10 Twitter Users this month on FanPage are:

    Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Barack Obama, Taylor Swift, Rihanna, Ellen DeGeneres, Lady Gaga, YouTube, Cristiano Rinaldo and Justin Timberlake

    The Most Influential Users from FanPage and Klout Are: YouTube, CNN, New York Times, National Football League, Associated Press, ESPN, The Guardian, TIME, Major League Baseball, and your cranky uncle who sends you political emails on his Facebook Page. Just kidding, #10 is actually USA Today. Barack Obama is #15, the highest ranking of anyone in the Top 10 Users list.



    Claiming you can post something and watch it go viral because Taylor Swift or CNN can attract hundreds of thousands of likes is like trying to walk down the red carpet at the Academy Awards, get a great seat up front, and take home two gift bags packed with free watches and bags of jewelry. That party is closed for us regular folks.

    Trump’s tactics on social media, ranging from insulting enemies to boasting to announcing major policies, are not usually successful for others, they only work for him. Like P.T. Barnum or Muhammad Ali, he’s a true original, an amazing promoter who obtains massive amounts of attention.

    Second, Social Media. Why isn’t social media just as powerful as traditional media?

    The main arguments in favor of social media from millennials concern usage and preference. Many young people believe some or most of these statements: “I like Instagram, SnapChat and Twitter. I’m on it all the time. I get my news from social media. I shop on social media. Social media gives me recommendations for restaurants and travel. Therefore, social media MUST be more influential than traditional media.”


    All very valid arguments. Yes, it’s very prevalent. The platforms are popular. But overall popularity does not always equate to influence. As I noted in a previous column social media is very common. There are more than five billion pieces of content posted on Facebook every day, along with more than 500 million Tweets. In addition to competing with influencers and celebrities, you face off against other posters and citizens.

    Sharad Goel and Ashton Anderson of Stanford University and Jake Hofman and Duncan Watts of Microsoft Research debunked viral media impact in their study in published in Management Science. “We find that structural virality is typically low, and remains so independent of size, suggesting that popularity is largely driven by the size of the largest broadcast,” Goel says. The “broadcast size” refers to the size of the audience, for example my 7000+ Twitter followers can’t compete with Cristiano Ronaldo or CNN. And Goel’s study determined the chance of something going viral on Twitter is about one in a million.





    Related Article: The Exponential Growth Of Social Media?



    But some companies and individuals utilize social media quite well.

    Here are three examples in public relations and the persuasion business where social media influences mass audiences.

    --Accelerating Traditional Media
    --Responding to Crisis in Real Time
    --Promoting Fake News and Conspiracies

    The goal of any social media superstar is to create and grow their own brand, which means regular posts, finding and attracting audiences, and keeping them engaged. Hard work and without compelling content, not easy to do. Testing this theory showing social media is a great medium to accelerate, rather than originate content, is quite easy. Anyone can test it. For someone in the PR industry, here’s how. Post your own opinion on something. Now, post something on the same subject where your client is quoted or profiled in Forbes, the New York Times, or your local TV station. Wild guess which one will attract more attention. The third-party validation of major brands are much stronger, in most cases, than individual opinions.



    Responding. During a crisis, new product announcements, breaking news, and other real-time events, publicists, companies and individuals can react in real time to explain their position, offer advice, lead people to safety and many other situations. Social media can be a boon to direct client-to-company conversations provided firms and PR pros are well educated and provide enough staff to respond quickly and professionally.

    Fake News. Conspiracies and fake news are the sewer of the Internet. Everyone knows the quote by Mark Twain that “a lie can travel half way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes.” Unfortunately digital media has accelerated this process so lies travel around the world several times before the truth can find their shoes in the closet.

    There are thousands of examples of fake news spreading through the digital wasteland, perhaps none better than a recent story in the New York Times, “How YouTube Shock Jocks Hijack News.” The reporter Kevin Rose followed a popular YouTube personality commenting about the shooting deaths in Sutherland Springs, Texas. Minutes after the news was reported, the poster claimed the gunman was either Black or Muslim (neither was true), then after the shooter was identified as White, predicted he was a Bernie Sanders supporter or a member of Antifa (again, not true.)



    “YouTube has long been a haven for slapdash political punditry, but in recent months, a certain type of hyper-prolific conspiracist has emerged as a dominant force. By reacting quickly and voluminously to breaking news, these rapid-response pundits – the YouTube equivalent of talk radio shock jocks – have successfully climbed the site’s search results, and exposed legions of viewers to their far-fetched theories.”

    A study in Nature () about “Limited individual attention and online virality of low-quality information” dissected the reasons why many people fall for incomplete and inaccurate data.

    A story in Business Insider summed it up nicely: “Economists concluded that it comes down to two factors. First, each of us has limited attention. Second, at any given moment, we have access to a lot of information — arguably more than at any previous time in history. Together, that creates a scenario in which facts compete with falsehoods for finite mental space. Often, falsehoods win out.


    And this doesn’t account for armies of bots and teams of programmers (hello Russia!) working 24-7 to spread their misinformation.

    Clearly, persuasion and propaganda are produced faster than ever.

    Social media isn’t going anywhere, it’s a permanent and expanding part of our culture and daily habits. By understanding where social media succeeds and fails, where it informs and deceives us, honest entrepreneurs, publicists, companies and individuals can ensure social media provides a platform for truth instead of lies. Now if only someone can come up with an algorithm that makes people’s thirst for the truth stronger than their urge for a really good rumor.

    Guest Authored By Robert Wynne. Robert owns a public relations and events agency in Redondo Beach, CA. He is the author of the Amazon bestselling book, Straight Talk About Public Relations. Follow Robert on Twitter.



    By understanding where social media succeeds and fails, where it informs and deceives us, honest entrepreneurs, publicists, companies and individuals can ensure social media provides a platform for truth instead of lies.

    Now if only someone can come up with an algorithm that makes people’s thirst for the truth stronger than their urge for a really good rumor.."


      • Authored by:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

      Sunday, November 19, 2017

      YOUR Social Media Hope And Inspiration?


      Remember when social media was fun, uplifting & even inspiring?

      These days, the constant stream of bad news on our feeds, not to mention the added threat of fake news, can make going on social media downright depressing at times.

      But the "good" is still out there. It's just that using social media now, more than ever, requires having a game plan of sorts. These tips are by no means rocket science, but -- as someone who lives and breathes social media -- they've helped me derive more value, and hope, from my feeds.



      In All Things, Moderation

      There's something undeniably pleasurable, even addictive, about Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat and other networks -- from the little hit of dopamine you get from liking a post to the thrill of connecting with a friend halfway around the world.

      But too much simply isn't a good thing. In fact, some studies suggest that this constant atmosphere of distraction is actually lowering IQ's and contributing to "continuous partial attention."

      That's why the first step to getting more out of social media is using it less. One fix is to schedule dedicated "social media times" in your daily agenda, just as you would for meetings. Or turn push notifications off so you're not constantly interrupted. Apps like Forest, Freedom and Self Control even let you block your own access to certain sites for pre-determined periods of time. The goal is to treat social media less as a snack-food binge --all empty calories -- and more as a deliberate gateway to richer, more nourishing content.



      Be A Savvy Media Consumer

      Back in the newspaper days, the old mantra was, "If it bleeds, it leads" -- editors knew that violence attracted eyeballs and played it up accordingly. These days, social media sites are laden with "triggers" -- provocative cues that beg for a response --from posts that deliberately incite negative emotions to the gratuitous use of the color red, which humans are programmed to treat as an alarm signal.

      Awareness here is half the battle. Scan your news stream with your own internal radar up. Am I being baited into clicking on something here? Is this update preying on my need for distraction or a quick, thoughtless pick me up? We know not to take all those tabloids at the supermarket checkout line at face value. It's time to apply this same healthy skepticism to social media. If it looks too good (or too bad) to be true, it probably is. Don't fall for it. Don't click.



      Reboot Your Follower List

      What shows up on your social media feed isn't random, of course. It's dictated, in large part, by what the people you follow are posting, clicking and commenting on. So ... drumroll, please ... if you want to see more positive, helpful and insightful news on social media, follow more people who are positive, helpful and insightful.

      The problem is we're not always so judicious when it comes to making connections. It's easy to end up with a feed dominated by a few loudmouths you barely know with a knack for stirring up controversy.

      That's why I recently embarked on an experiment on Twitter. I unfollowed everyone and am slowly rebuilding my follower list from scratch, with the goal of populating my home stream with updates that are actually valuable.



      Skew Local

      Something to ponder: if we lived in the age of Jack the Ripper, we might not have known --or, more to the point, worried about -- Jack the Ripper. Much of North America was blissfully ignorant at the time. Of course, we now live in an era when news -- and calamity -- from every corner of the globe is updated on our social feeds in real time.

      It's important to be a global citizen, but there's something to be said about sometimes focusing on problems we can solve, events we can attend and people we can actually impact, rather than always worrying about what's going on a world away. Find and follow local groups -- charities, bands, sports clubs -- on Facebook. Seek out local politicians, journalists and businesses on Twitter.

      I've found that the more local your social media connections are, the more rewarding the experience is.



      Demand Algorithm Ethics

      Most social media algorithms are optimized with one metric in mind: engagement.

      You're dished up whatever content is deemed most clickable and most comment-able, with little regard for its veracity, news value or other factors. For the networks themselves, I can understand the appeal and economics of that approach.

      But we've already glimpsed where this path of least resistance leads, from offensive ads to political manipulation in the U.S. presidential election. The algorithms that serve up our content need to, at the least, take credibility into account.

      Better still, they need an ethical coefficient -- a weighting for civic value, basic decency and social good.



      Would this be contentious? Maybe. Easy to implement? Maybe not.

      But considering the reach and power of the medium, I think we deserve better. In the meantime, one easy step to change the look of your Facebook stream is simply to switch the News Feed settings from "Top Stories" to "Most Recent" -- this ignores the popularity factor and serves you up content in strictly chronological order.

      Guest Authored By Ryan Holmes. Ryan is the founder and CEO of Hootsuite, the world’s most widely used social relationship platform, with 15 million-plus users, including more than 800 of the Fortune 1000 companies. A serial entrepreneur, he started my first business in high school, ultimately opening a string of ventures—from a pizza restaurant to a digital media agency—before starting Hootsuite. Today, he loves building vibrant companies with strong cultures, as well as sharing what he's learned on the frontlines with other entrepreneurs and business leaders. Ryan's the author of the Amazon-best-selling guide to social media for leaders, The $4 Billion Tweet, and he's also a global influencer on LinkedIn, Facebook and other social networks. Follow Ryan on Twitter.




      I don't mean to get preachy here. I love social media.

      It's powered revolutions around the globe, brought people closer together and made it possible for all kinds of entrepreneurs (like me) to find success.

      So take these tips with a grain of salt -- I hope there's an idea or two that resonates with you. And if you're still looking for the "good" on social media, there's always Tank's Good News." -Ryan Holmes


        • Authored by:
          Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)