The common and continual mischiefs of the spirit of party are sufficient to make it the interest and duty of a wise people to discourage and restrain it.
-George Washington-
Saturday, May 16, 2009
Lying with Dogs: How the Internet Spreads Untruth.
Like almost everyone with a
computer, I have an aunt who e-mails me cute inanities regularly. I usually
ignore them – those that aren’t just plain unfunny are usually quite old- but
she recently sent one titled “Bill Cosby Does It Again!” that caught my notice
as a longtime Cosby fan. It seemed familiar instantly. It began with Cosby’s
stated intent to be a write-in Presidential candidate, and outlined a platform:
English as our official language, isolationist economics, closed borders,
adoption of “Turkish-style” corporal and capital punishments, and elimination
of foreign aid were among the planks. It took me less than five minutes of
Googling to debunk it for it was, as I suspected, quite old, and has been
attributed to George Carlin, Robin Williams, and Andy Rooney as well as Cosby. Snopes.com
and several others quoted Cosby: “The platform attributed to me [and others]
does not represent my views and in many respects is abhorrent to me.” Bad
information is nothing new, of course, but this e-mail – one of millions sent
across the world every day – exemplifies how the Internet, a fountain of
information that forms history’s most powerful research tool, is instead just
as likely to enable and simplify the spreading of untruths.
What
is Information?
Information
comes in several distinct forms. Information as discussed here in broad
terms is data set in a context for relevance – it tells us something that we
can use to take action or make decisions. Propaganda is distinguished by
purpose; whether true or false, the information is presented in such a way as
to provoke a specific action or attitude, and is thus subjective at best (Kirk
1). Misinformation, unlike propaganda, is always untrue but innocently
so; it isn’t a lie, it’s just wrong (2). Many people who spread misinformation
are repeating something they assume is true, while others simply mishear or
misread something and repeat what they mistakenly absorbed (“The Misinformation
Highway?” 6). Anyone who has seen a rumor get passed around or played the old
game of “telephone,” where a story is passed from person to person, knows how
this works, and one would have to be a lifelong hermit to be completely
innocent. (This was the case with my aunt. When I told her that the e-mail was
bogus, she simply said that it sounded to her like something Cosby would say.
Since Cosby himself used the word “abhorrent” to describe some items on the
list, it obviously isn’t something he would say. It did, however, give her use
of Cosby’s image and reputation to back up things that she would say.) Disinformation
is the most insidious; it is intentionally disseminated falsehood. Often,
misinformation begins as disinformation, though it can be difficult to prove (Kirk
3).
If bad
information is nothing new, why should Internet misinformation concern us?
Because bad information may cause bad decisions, it affects us adversely
anywhere. False information on a pseudo-scientific website, for instance, might
wrongly sway someone to let a symptom go unchecked, or panic a healthy person.
A widely spread falsehood caused a 60% drop in Emulex Corporation stock;
although the company bounced back mostly, there were still losses suffered
(Weinstein 1). On a larger scale, dis- or misinformation can have extreme
consequences, such as helping to create demand for a war. Far more regularly it
is used to influence elections; while you can’t fool all of the people all
of the time, it may be sufficient to fool enough people by Election Day
(“The Misinformation Highway?” 5).
The Subjective Mind
Before
exploring the Internet’s role, it helps to understand how people absorb
information and form opinions. We like to tell each other and ourselves that we
base our opinions factually, but studies have repeatedly suggested otherwise.
Even when we have reasonably balanced and factual sources of information, we
tend to remember items that support our already established opinions and
discount news that contradicts them (Wang and Aamodt 1). When Yale political
scientist John Bullock showed a group an advertisement that accused John G.
Roberts Jr., then a Supreme Court nominee, of "supporting violent fringe
groups and a convicted clinic bomber," Democratic disapproval in the group
leapt from 56% to 80%. After a refutation was shown, it lowered to 72%;
obviously, the refutation – which was true - was less convincing to Democrats
than the lie. On the other hand, the refutation completely eliminated the
disapproval increase among the group’s Republicans. Shankar Vedantam, writing
about this study in the Washington Post, concluded ” The damaging
charge, in other words, continued to have an effect even after it was debunked
among precisely those people predisposed to buy the bad information in the
first place (1).”
The effect
refutations have is even more fascinating when dealing with conservative
opinions. We saw how Republicans, who were predisposed to approve of Roberts,
accepted the refutation over the damaging claim. In another study, two groups
were given the Bush administration’s pre-Iraq War statements about that
nation’s weapons programs, which, as Republicans (these groups were not mixed),
they viewed sympathetically. Only one group was shown the 2004 Duelfer report
stating that the WMDs did not exist prior to U.S. invasion. Among the group
that heard only the initial information, 34% thought that Iraq had hidden or
destroyed its weapons. In the group that saw both information and refutation
that number jumped to 64%. Refutation did not strongly convince Democrats;
Republicans shown a refutation actually believed the misinformation in greater
numbers. Some postulate that this may result from Republicans having “more
rigid views” than liberals; they may argue back against refutations that they
don’t want to believe, thereby strengthening belief in the misinformation
(Vedantam 2). Either way, these studies show what we tend to notice ourselves
anyway: that people, on the whole, will believe what they want to believe.
Constant repetition, such as we have online, via e-mail, or on 24-hour news
channels, simply reinforces that situation.
Shouldn’t
the source of the information influence belief? It does, but not entirely as
expected. In a 1951 Yale University study, two groups were given identical
information( Hovland and Weiss, 636). One group was told that the information
came from sources generally considered reliable, while the other group was told
the information came from less reliable sources. The groups were quizzed on
their knowledge and opinions before, immediately after, and four weeks after
being given the information. Prior opinion’s effect on belief was again noted,
but the second quiz made plain that the “reliable source” influenced belief
more than the “unreliable source.” There was absolutely no difference learned
information between the two sources – the only thing that differed was belief
(641-2). This is not surprising; however, the results of the third quiz,
administered a month later, were.
After four
weeks, the third quiz revealed that belief in the information gained from the
“reliable” source had lowered, while belief in the information gained from the
“unreliable source” had increased. This “sleeper effect” was attributed to
people gradually forgetting the source (645). Where one source’s perceived reliability
created confidence in the information, the opposite perception about the other
source created a barrier to belief, with prior bias mitigating both effects.
After four weeks, the sources – and the perceptions about them – were retained
in fewer individuals. What remained was the information – the absorption and
retention of which was still unchanged between the two sources – and the
personal bias that influenced belief in that information (650).
This
phenomenon has since been proven and named “source amnesia.”The information we gather is initially
stored in a brain section called the hippocampus. Stored with it is contextual
information: where we learned it, from who we learned it, our opinions of that
source, etc. Recalling the information reprocesses it, but not necessarily with
all the contextual information. Eventually, the information is stored in the
cerebral cortex without the contextual information (Wang and Aamodt 1). This is
why we are able to do things like drive cars without having to recall the
initial process of learning to drive. It also explains how we can cling to
beliefs that are not true – even after being told they are not true, as in the
case of those who still believe that Iraq had nuclear weapons.
The Internet’s Role
When
considering the Internet’s role in spreading untruths, it is pertinent to
remember that the Internet was originally called the Information Superhighway.
This is a much more descriptive name; the Internet certainly is, if nothing
else, an informational Autobahn. With its speed and near-ubiquity, it is by far
the best vehicle for moving, storing, and retrieving data ever conceived.
Therein lies the problem, however; as far as movement, storage, and retrieval
goes, false information is no different than true information, and a system
that spreads one is equally suited to spreading the other.
Access to
the Internet is widespread not only for users, but equally so for content
originators. One needn’t even go to personal expense, as Internet connections
are available to everyone via schools, libraries, work, or friends and
relatives. Anyone who can see Internet content can also create it in many ways,
such as thread comments, e-mails, blogging, website creation, or sites such as Wikipedia
that encourage audience interaction. Because of this, people can always find
what they want – they aren’t limited to what the news media chooses to tell
them or what publishers see as marketable. The modern Internet is truly a
marketplace for ideas. That means that no matter what preconceived notions a
person might have, information that supports and feeds those notions is only a
search engine away. If someone is inclined to believe, for instance, that
President Obama was not born in the United States, that person will find ample
support for that belief, despite the fact that it was disproved long ago. That
support strengthens the belief since the fact that someone else believes the
same thing provides a sense of community, and the false belief is then easy to
spread further via comments, blog posts, or mass e-mails.
Aggravating this is, of course, the
fact that the Internet has few content controls. Some serious sites have
editors that verify content’s veracity; far more have editors that simply
filter content to reflect their beliefs. Comments on threads, where they are
monitored, are usually just monitored for profanity, not accuracy. Therefore a
person who believes that President Obama’s birth certificate is fake can spread
that untruth pretty much anywhere, as long as he doesn’t swear while he does
it. The ease with which it is done increases its likelihood and frequency.
Before the Internet, my aunt may have heard a false story about Bill Cosby’s
political views, and she may have passed it on to my other aunts and assorted
relatives during one of many “henhouse”
gab sessions, but she would not have written it out and mailed it via the
postal service to 30 people. With the Internet, however, she can simply read it
in her mailbox and with a few clicks, send it to 30 people in less than a
minute. In her mind, the fact that she didn’t take the time to research it is a
waiver, not a problem – after all, she didn’t write it in the first
place, did she? All she did was pass it on. While I may consider that being
part of the problem, many others see it as an exoneration. It is apparent that
while misinformation today may not be worse than it has been through more
traditional media, it is certainly easier to spread (“The Misinformation
Highway?” 1). This means that the spreading of bunk is not only more
widespread, but also more tenacious. The birth certificate story, for instance,
disappeared from the newspapers after it was disproved, but not from the
Internet where it can still be found well after the election. If people are
inclined to believe things that they already agree with, and they can easily
find sites that present information that fits that criteria, then literally
anything that anyone wants to believe can be absorbed as a truth that is then
spread with the words “I read somewhere that….”
Yet while information is easily
found on the Internet, the accuracy of it is harder than ever to judge. As the
amount of sources available increases, the criteria by which a source’s
trustworthiness may be judged wanes. In the mainstream media’s heyday, which
many say is now long over, a newspaper or network could establish a strong
ethos, or reputation, for accuracy or integrity by making sure of their facts
and having consequences for those that did not. When Walter Cronkite said
“That’s the way it is,” people trusted that it was that way after his and his
employer’s reputations were cemented. If the editor of the New York Sun says
there’s a Santa Claus, well, that’s good enough for Virginia.
On today’s
Internet, however, so many sources are available that it can be hard to tell
the good ones from the bad. Ownership of most sites is very unclear, and not
easy to find should someone be curious. Internet writers often use a nom de
plume or “Internet identity (in fact, I
know a guy like that),” or simply write anonymously. There are no standards or
guidelines as in journalism, and no governing bodies as far as veracity is
concerned. This makes it easy not only to avoid building a clear ethos, but
also to create a false one. A false identity, title, education, or level of
experience is easily created “behind the curtain,” so to speak. A real ethos
may also be “borrowed,” as the e-mail attributed to Cosby, Williams, and Rooney
illustrates.
Of course,
the audience helps writers circumvent ethos development in many ways. People
may be so impressed with a site’s layout or features that they assume that the
information presented can be believed. In cases like this, the medium truly is
the message, as it is the presentation more than anything else that is
convincing. The reader may not be expert enough to judge if the information is
accurate or even likely to be. Someone with no medical training, for instance,
may be fooled by information that a medical doctor would laugh at. Cannier
readers than that can still be fooled by foreign sources, simply because of
their unfamiliarity. Most people can judge the worth of a paper from Oxford
University, but how does one judge an Icelandic university that one has never
heard of? Second-hand information from known, reliable sources may be difficult
to find in such a situation (Vedder 5).
Of course,
such questions of ethos are largely academic because of source amnesia. What
does ethos mean in the long run, when the source itself is likely to be
forgotten in a month and the information believed or disbelieved on the basis
of personal preference more than the source’s integrity? The fact that people
can find whatever information they want and find as many repetitions as it
takes to convince them that it is true is all that truly matters in the
Internet’s spreading of misinformation. Lack of clear ethos at the onset merely
makes the process go even faster.
Is there a solution?
What may be
done to improve this situation? So far, there is no concrete answer to that
question – in fact, the problem itself, while universally acknowledged as
existing, is not universally acknowledged as being important. Certainly, those
whose business it is to influence opinion are fine with the status quo. Those
who are not see two broad approaches. One is to control Internet content more
strictly; the other is a user-based approach.
The former
solution is a sticky wicket. Does it involve more government control? More
corporate control? Most Americans see too much control as no better for
veracity than too little. Certainly, Hitler’s propaganda machine and the Soviet
Union’s Pravda were both tightly controlled disinformation spreaders.
Many equate limiting anonymity with limiting freedom of speech (Vedder 7). The
need to balance necessary freedoms with the control needed to limit
disinformation makes this an unlikely solution, as Americans are inherently distrustful
of those who would act as censors or filters of information for the public
good. A third-party authority with which to establish a site’s ethical criteria
could help, but who would establish such an authority, and how? What authority
would be acceptable across cultural and political lines?
User-based
solutions are educationally based, and involve developing a more critical
attitude in the general populace (Vedder 5). This would, ironically, have to
begin in early education where learning by rote is often more valued than
critical thinking (which can often get you sent to the principal’s office).
This critical attitude would be akin to the “don’t believe everything you read
in the paper” credo of old. While we are all familiar with this old saw, it
does not always translate to the Internet – possibly because, as stated, what
we want to read is always out there and easily found, reinforcing what we
wanted to believe in the first place. It is one thing to acknowledge that there
are “dogs” on the Internet and that they lie, but it’s another to associate
that definition with those we agree, or “lie,” with. How readily can people be
educated to resist the lure of easy, palatable answers, especially when so many
people endeavor to pass their pre-conceived notions to their children
regardless of what the educational system says about those notions? Still, if
more people can be taught to use the same tools that spread disinformation to
debunk the same by researching issues instead of simply looking for what they
want to see, perhaps the spread of misinformation can at least be slowed over
time, and outlets with established ethos and integrity- like newspapers and
networks of the past – built up as well. Then, the Internet can be what it
could and should be – a way of empowering individuals with accurate, usable
information – rather than a simple marketplace of good and bad information
alike, where truth must be dug for but attractive lies are always at the ready.
Weinstein,
Lauren. “PFIR Statement on Internet Hoaxes and Misinformation.” People for
Internet Responsibility. 28 August 2000. http://www.pfir.org/statements/hoaxes
Vedder, Anton.
“Misinformation Through the Internet: Espistemology and Ethics.” In: Anton
Vedder (ed.), Ethics and the Internet. Antwerpen, Groningen, Oxford:
Intersentia, 2001, p.125-132. http://arno.uvt.nl/show.cgi?fid=4795. (Prints
with page numbers 1-8)
Steiner,
Peter. “On the Internet, Nobody Knows You’re a Dog.” The New Yorker. 5
July, 1993, p. 61. School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.27 August 1997. http://www.unc.edu/depts/jomc/academics/dri/idog.html
TIM May 24, 2009 10:56 AM PDT "<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]-->
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what is all of this gibberish? it distracts from the post.
Best solution is to take wiki w/ a grain of salt and verify any sources cited.
BTW go over and click on some ads at my blog. I'm trying to figure out if adsense will make me an overnight millionare (lol).
LYNNE OCONNOR June 1, 2009 12:47 PM PDT Less government control and let the buyer beware are my preferred options. Even so-called legitimate facts can be twisted and valid arguments can be made for just about any point of view depending on the persuasive skill of the pundit. I certainly don't want to have my tax dollars go to a government to do my thinking for me.