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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Atlantic (Gift) : Rumors on X Are Becoming the Right's New Reality
Laurence Tribe ⚖️
@tribelaw
Im aware that being on X has real downsides but I dont want to give up the way this platform enables me to reach lots of eyeballs and fight lies with truth or leave it to the alt-reality far right. So Im staying, despite the problem of being part of something evil
11:09 AM · Oct 13, 2024
@tribelaw
Im aware that being on X has real downsides but I dont want to give up the way this platform enables me to reach lots of eyeballs and fight lies with truth or leave it to the alt-reality far right. So Im staying, despite the problem of being part of something evil
Anne Applebaum
Oct 12
If you are on X, you should read this, by @noUpside: this site is now dedicated to creating an alternate, far-right reality ([link:link:https://theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/10/rumors-x-twitter-musk/680219/?gift=hVZeG3M9DnxL4CekrWGK3w5mDUcxsF_2uepUELZAflE&utm_source=copy-|Gift Article])
11:09 AM · Oct 13, 2024
(Gift Article) Rumors on X Are Becoming the Rights New Reality
The site formerly known as Twitter has become the center of a fantastical political culture.
By Renée DiResta
October 11, 2024
A curious set of claims has recently emerged from the right-wing corners of the social-media platform X: FEMA is systematically abandoning Trump-supporting Hurricane Helene victims; Democrats (and perhaps Jewish people) are manipulating the weather; Haitian immigrants are eating pet cats in Springfield, Ohio. These stories seem absurd to most people. But to a growing number of Americans living in bespoke realities, wild rumors on X carry weight. Political influencers, elites, and prominent politicians on the right are embracing even pathologically outlandish claims made by their base. They know that amplifying online rumors carries little costand offers considerable political gain.
Unverified claims that spread from person to person, filling the voids where uncertainty reigns, are as old as human communication itself. Some of the juiciest rumors inspire outrage and contradict official accountsand from time to time, such a claim turns out to be true. Sharing a rumor is a form of community participation, a way of signaling solidarity with friends, ostracizing some out-group, or both. Political rumors are particularly well suited to the current incarnation of X, a platform that evolved from a place for real-time news and conversations into a gladiatorial arena for partisan fights, owned by a reflexive contrarian with a distaste for media, institutions, and most authority figures.
When Elon Musk bought the platform, then known as Twitter, in 2022, he argued that it had become too quick to censor heterodox and conservative ideas. For Twitter to deserve public trust, it must be politically neutral, he said in April 2022, shortly after initiating his purchase, which effectively means upsetting the far right and the far left equally. But Musk quickly broomed out most of the Trust and Safety team that addressed false and misleading content, along with spam, foreign bots, and other problems. As Musk has drifted to the righthis profile picture now features him in a MAGA hatthe platform he rebranded as X has become the center of a right-wing political culture built upon a fantastical rumor mill. Although false and misleading ideas also spread on Facebook, Telegram, and Trumps own platform, Truth Social, they move faster and get more views on Xand are likelier to find their way into mainstream political discussion.
Many political rumors on social media begin when people share something they supposedly heard from an indirect acquaintance: The false narrative about pet-eating Haitian immigrants in Springfield started when one woman posted to a Facebook group that her neighbors daughters friend had lost their cat and had seen Haitians in a house nearby carving it up to eat. Others picked up the story and started posting about it. Another woman shared a screenshot of the Springfield post on X, to bolster her own previous claim that ducks were disappearing from local parks.
/snip
The site formerly known as Twitter has become the center of a fantastical political culture.
By Renée DiResta
October 11, 2024
A curious set of claims has recently emerged from the right-wing corners of the social-media platform X: FEMA is systematically abandoning Trump-supporting Hurricane Helene victims; Democrats (and perhaps Jewish people) are manipulating the weather; Haitian immigrants are eating pet cats in Springfield, Ohio. These stories seem absurd to most people. But to a growing number of Americans living in bespoke realities, wild rumors on X carry weight. Political influencers, elites, and prominent politicians on the right are embracing even pathologically outlandish claims made by their base. They know that amplifying online rumors carries little costand offers considerable political gain.
Unverified claims that spread from person to person, filling the voids where uncertainty reigns, are as old as human communication itself. Some of the juiciest rumors inspire outrage and contradict official accountsand from time to time, such a claim turns out to be true. Sharing a rumor is a form of community participation, a way of signaling solidarity with friends, ostracizing some out-group, or both. Political rumors are particularly well suited to the current incarnation of X, a platform that evolved from a place for real-time news and conversations into a gladiatorial arena for partisan fights, owned by a reflexive contrarian with a distaste for media, institutions, and most authority figures.
When Elon Musk bought the platform, then known as Twitter, in 2022, he argued that it had become too quick to censor heterodox and conservative ideas. For Twitter to deserve public trust, it must be politically neutral, he said in April 2022, shortly after initiating his purchase, which effectively means upsetting the far right and the far left equally. But Musk quickly broomed out most of the Trust and Safety team that addressed false and misleading content, along with spam, foreign bots, and other problems. As Musk has drifted to the righthis profile picture now features him in a MAGA hatthe platform he rebranded as X has become the center of a right-wing political culture built upon a fantastical rumor mill. Although false and misleading ideas also spread on Facebook, Telegram, and Trumps own platform, Truth Social, they move faster and get more views on Xand are likelier to find their way into mainstream political discussion.
Many political rumors on social media begin when people share something they supposedly heard from an indirect acquaintance: The false narrative about pet-eating Haitian immigrants in Springfield started when one woman posted to a Facebook group that her neighbors daughters friend had lost their cat and had seen Haitians in a house nearby carving it up to eat. Others picked up the story and started posting about it. Another woman shared a screenshot of the Springfield post on X, to bolster her own previous claim that ducks were disappearing from local parks.
/snip
I'm immune to rumor "X" msgs because I follow no one but Govt, Established News Media, Verified Liberals etc. and I stay out of the comments sections. Also use Ad Block so I don't see any of his revenue-generating crap, either.
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The Atlantic (Gift) : Rumors on X Are Becoming the Right's New Reality (Original Post)
Dennis Donovan
Sunday
OP
Arthur_Frain
(2,082 posts)1. They've always been like this.
When musk bought twitter, he did it to intentionally turn it into free republic or 4chan, but on steroids.
So glad Ive never had either a facebook or a twitter account. Probably a much better person for it.