scholarly journals Ethical Thoughts of the Regulation of False Information in Social Media: Based on Legitimacy and Social Justice

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. p1
Author(s):  
Chien-wei Kung

It is now common for social media to regulate rumors. They claim that the purpose of this action is to safeguard social interests. However, some cases have proved that the regulation of rumor has exceeded the necessary limit, but also showed the partiality of the regulation object and the irrationality of the “rumor” standard. Although freedom of speech has boundaries, the regulation of social media is much stricter than it, which hurts social media to play its role as a public sphere. We can’t ask individuals to take too much responsibility for rumor spreading. At the same time, we can’t easily take harsh regulatory measures such as deplatforming and even legal sanctions against individuals, because this will lead to the lack of legitimacy of the regulatory behavior of social media and the aftereffect of injustice.

2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Linke ◽  
Jim Macnamara

Editorial Welcome to this special issue of Public Communication Review themed ‘Social Media – Social Organisations – Social Interests’. Much has been said and written about the digital (r)evolution and the transition from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0, particularly the rise of what are widely termed social media. Looking beyond technological determinism and technological transformism that inevitably accompany such developments, scholars are increasingly focussing on the ‘sociology of technology’ – the social changes that both influence and arise from such developments, as well as changes in the practices of media and communication that occur. This issue was created to particularly explore notions of the ‘social organisation’, a concept advanced by Gartner and other business consulting firms which suggest that organisations are becoming more open, interactive, dialogic and responsive to their stakeholders and publics through use of social media. In turn, this suggest that social media and social organisations are more openly recognising and reflecting social interests – rather than being organisation-centric focussed on achievement of their own ‘strategic’ objectives. The potentiality of social media, reflected in discourses of media democratisation, prosumerism, and the global public sphere is much celebrated. Social media ostensibly afford two-way dialogic communication, opportunities for user-generated content, networking and even ‘communication without borders’, according to some papers presented at the 2012 World Public Relations Forum held in Melbourne in the same month as this issue. But what of the reality? Accepting that social media are now recognised as part of the media environment and the public sphere and need no introduction, this issue focuses particularly on the two perspectives that are highlighted in the theme: how organisations are using and being affected by social media, on one hand, and how social interests are being served through social media – or not – on the other. The new communication environment offers many opportunities for organisations. One is the ability to extend word of mouth communication to what some refer to as ‘word of mouse’ or, more formally, eWOM. Through the internet, the face-to-face limitation of word of mouth is removed and messages that once reached a few can reach millions through social media such as Twitter, causing some to refer to eWOM as word of mouth on steroids. The potential for social media to create and extend positive and negative word of mouth messages, which in turn effect corporate reputation, is explored by Martin Williams, Francis Buttler and Sergio Biggemann in their article ‘Relating word-of-mouth to corporate reputation’. Nevertheless, social media bring challenges to organisations to which they need to adapt, such as expectation of faster response, a breakdown of communication ‘control’ through single authorised spokespersons and PR departments and a shift to widespread online discussion by employees, resulting in calls for governance, as discussed by Anne Linke and Ansgar Zerfass in their examination of current practices among organisations and future trends in Europe. Also, we are pleased to present a review by Suresh Sood of Brian Solis’ new book, The End of Business as Usual. This reflects on changes taking place, the principles of social media communication and how these challenge organisation-centred thinking and traditional public communication practices. On the other side, three articles explore social interests and how these are being served through social media – if indeed they are. Ann Louise de la Poype and Suresh Sood examine the role and uses of social media in the public sphere through the example of the nuclear debate in Post-Fukushima France in their article ‘Public sphere dialogue in online newspapers and social spaces’. From a political communication perspective, Marie Grussel and Lars Nord analyse the use of social media for national elections in Sweden in their article ‘Three attitudes to 140 characters’. These contributions to discussion reflect on whether social media enhance the public sphere and afford citizen voice, or whether it is ‘business as usual’. A further valuable perspective challenges the persistent myth that social media are only for the young. Beyond the world of ‘digital natives’, Daniel Schultheiss examines how ‘silver gamers’ – elderly people – turn to online games for entertainment, stimulation and social interaction – in his article, ‘Entertainment for retirement’. The use of online games by the elderly and their entertainment functions are not trivial. Some health experts suggest that interactive social media and online games can provide stimulation that slows down dementia and other age-related illnesses, as well as providing pleasurable activities for an increasing segment of the population in many societies. We thank the contributing authors and reviewers for their support in producing this special issue and we encourage all scholars in the public communication field to consider Public Communication Review in 2013. Anne Linke, Guest Editor, University of Leipzig, Germany Jim Macnamara, Editor, University of Technology, Sydney


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wafiyuddin Musyaffak ◽  
Moses Glorino Rumambo Pandin

The right to freedom of speech is a natural right owned by every human being born on earth, a gift from the Creator for his creatures, which is also included in human rights. However, with the development of the times, freedom of speech has experienced many steep paths in practice. This study aims to provide insight into how the historical and polemic paradigms are faced in freedom of speech in the 21st-century public sphere, especially in its development and practice. The question in this research is "what is the historical paradigm in freedom of speech, and what are the phenomena and polemics in the 21st-century public sphere?". The method used in this research is to qualitative research methods with the approaches literature review of the literature resources during the last three years, which was in 2019-2021, the 16 journals of scientific articles, one book, and four web news presented by Kompas, CNN Indonesia, and Detik.com. With the sources of the last three years being evidence of novelty, this is evidenced by the rise of hate speech on social media and there is a polemic about the Constitution of electronic information and transaction (UU ITE) which in the 21st century is still ongoing which will be discussed in this article.The result of this study is to provide insight into the historical and polemic paradigms that occur in the right to free speech in the 21st century by giving reliable literature with in-depth and critical evaluation. This research is expected to be recommended for the wider community, especially the academic community, so that later they can provide socialization to the public about the importance of freedom of speech following ethics. The importance of discussing this article is that the society understands the importance of the right to freedom of speech in public, especially in social media and also understands the limits of speech because there is an ITE Law that regulates this.The limitation of the research is that the sources have the same context, so that in the study, it is necessary to take a broad perspective from these sources, one of which is news sources on the internet. However, from different news stories, most of the contents are almost the same.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 556
Author(s):  
Thaer Thaher ◽  
Mahmoud Saheb ◽  
Hamza Turabieh ◽  
Hamouda Chantar

Fake or false information on social media platforms is a significant challenge that leads to deliberately misleading users due to the inclusion of rumors, propaganda, or deceptive information about a person, organization, or service. Twitter is one of the most widely used social media platforms, especially in the Arab region, where the number of users is steadily increasing, accompanied by an increase in the rate of fake news. This drew the attention of researchers to provide a safe online environment free of misleading information. This paper aims to propose a smart classification model for the early detection of fake news in Arabic tweets utilizing Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques, Machine Learning (ML) models, and Harris Hawks Optimizer (HHO) as a wrapper-based feature selection approach. Arabic Twitter corpus composed of 1862 previously annotated tweets was utilized by this research to assess the efficiency of the proposed model. The Bag of Words (BoW) model is utilized using different term-weighting schemes for feature extraction. Eight well-known learning algorithms are investigated with varying combinations of features, including user-profile, content-based, and words-features. Reported results showed that the Logistic Regression (LR) with Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency (TF-IDF) model scores the best rank. Moreover, feature selection based on the binary HHO algorithm plays a vital role in reducing dimensionality, thereby enhancing the learning model’s performance for fake news detection. Interestingly, the proposed BHHO-LR model can yield a better enhancement of 5% compared with previous works on the same dataset.


Author(s):  
Susannah Heschel

The friendship between Abraham Joshua Heschel and Reinhold Niebuhr was both personal and intellectual. Neighbours on the Upper West Side of New York City, they walked together in Riverside park and shared personal concerns in private letters; Niebuhr asked Heschel to deliver the eulogy at his funeral. They were bound by shared religious sensibilities as well, including their love of the Hebrew Bible, the irony they saw in American history and in the writings of the Hebrew prophets, and in their commitment to social justice as a duty to God. Heschel arrived in the public sphere later, as a public intellectual with a prophetic voice, much as Niebuhr had been for many decades prior. Niebuhr’s affirmation of the affinities between his and Heschel’s theological scholarship pays tribute to an extraordinary friendship of Protestant and Jew.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin Careless

Social media as a communicative forum is relatively new, having been around for only ten years. However, this form of digital engagement has revolutionized the way many people interact, network, form relationships, learn, generate and share knowledge. As a noncentralized tool for communication, social media may provide space for critical discourse around issues of social justice, as discussion can be global in scope and is controlled by users themselves. This paper outlines a critical theoretical framework through which to explore the use of social media in adult education to foster such critical and social justice-themed discourse. Drawing upon five critical theorists and their work, this framework sets the stage for a future research project – one that is significant for this increasingly digital world in which we live.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominic Ligot ◽  
Frances Claire Tayco ◽  
Mark Toledo ◽  
Carlos Nazareno ◽  
Denise Brennan-Rieder

Objectives. Infodemics of false information on social media is a growing societal problem, aggravated by the occurrence of the COVID-19 pandemic. The development of infodemics has characteristic resemblances to epidemics of infectious diseases. This paper presents several methodologies which aim to measure the extent and development of infodemics through the lens of epidemiology.Methods. Time varying R was used as a measure for the infectiousness of the infodemic, topic modeling was used to create topic clouds and topic similarity heat maps, while network analysis was used to create directed and undirected graphs to identify super-spreader and multiple carrier communities on social media.Results. Forty-two (42) latent topics were discovered. Reproductive trends for a specific topic were observed to have significantly higher peaks (Rt 4-5) than general misinformation (Rt 1-3). From a sample of social media misinformation posts, a total of 385 groups and 804 connections were found within the network, with the largest group having 1,643 shares and 1,063,579 interactions over a 12 month period.Conclusions. These approaches enable the measurement of the infectiousness of an infodemic, comparative analysis of infodemic topics, and identification of likely super-spreaders and multiple carriers on social media. The results of these analyses can form the basis for taking action to stem an ongoing spread of misinformation on social media and mitigate against future infodemics. The methods are not confined to health misinformation and may be applied to other infodemics, such as conspiracy theories, political disinformation, and climate change denial.


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