69“«Ć½ researchersā work informs Lords report warning of āpandemic of misinformationā in democracy
The advice of two researchers at 69“«Ć½ has informed a report into democracy and digital technologies by a House of Lords committee.
Vian Bakir, Prof. of Journalism and Andrew McStay, Prof. of Digital Life, gave evidence to the House of Lordsā research into the need for transparency in political groupsā digital campaigning.Vian Bakir
Their are in the report,, published by the House of Lords Select Committee on Democracy and Digital Technologies.
The House of Lords report states that we are in a āpandemic of āmisinformationā and ādisinformationāā that, if unaddressed, could lead to āthe collapse of public trust, and without trust democracy as we know it will simply decline into irrelevanceā.
In their evidence to this Select Committee, the 69“«Ć½ professors emphasised how use of digital technologies in political campaigning can benefit the democratic process, such as through mobilising and engaging people who might otherwise not vote.
However, they focus on how such technologies can also harm democracy if there is no transparency in how these technologies are Andrew McStayused.
āThere are many potential democratic problems with digital campaigning, if the profiling of target audiences and the optimisation of messages is done opaquely, so that people donāt understand that theyāre being targeted with emotive or deceptive messages that have been personalised to press their buttons,ā Vian Bakir said.
āFor instance, if one voter is privately presented with quite different messages to the next, then how can voters make informed choices, and how can people hold those elected to account? Also, how can we ensure that people arenāt discouraged from voting via personalised messages intended to suppress their vote?
āHow can we ensure that political campaigners donāt try to exploit peopleās own psychological vulnerabilities by preying on their private anxieties? If we donāt know what political campaigners are up to, what messages they are sending, to whom and why, then it makes answering any of these questions difficult.
āWe do know that the digital political campaigning spend has increased a lot in the UK in the last few years, and that some political parties are quite liberal in their in social media campaign messages.ā
Transparency
In their evidence, the professors illustrate these issues by focusing on the various āLeaveā groupsā campaigns in the UKās 2016 Referendum on whether or not to Remain in, or Leave, the European Union (EU).
To prevent further harm, they recommend greater transparency of digital campaigns. Voters should know:
⢠Which audiences were targeted;
⢠What the basis of the targeting was (including demographics and psychographics);
⢠What sort of messages were used;
⢠To what end (e.g. voter mobilisation, suppression);
⢠Which aspects of the campaign most succeeded in engaging voters (e.g. specific adverts, messages, themes, memes).
To further enact such transparency, and alongside other organs of civil society, they also endorsed the need for imprints in political adverts on social media ā so that at the very minimum, it will always be clear to citizens who sent them the political message online.
They also recommended better media literacy for voters, and self-reflection by political campaigners on things like the informativeness and civility of their own campaign.
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Building on such evidence, the House of Lordsā report makes an urgent case for reform of electoral law as well as our overwhelming need to become a digitally literate society.
For instance, one of its 45 recommendations is that the Government should establish an independent, public-facing hub that provides information about basic democratic procedures, and also shares best practice in digital democracy between policymakers and civil society organisations.
Such media literacy on democratic procedures is important. Vian Bakir points out that a recent nationwide YouGov commissioned by the Open Rights Group shows that almost a third of the UK electorate are still unaware, or not very aware, of how political parties target or tailor adverts based on the analysis of their personal data (political microtargeting).
āIf we arenāt aware of attempted manipulation through political microtargeting, then we wonāt have our guards up when campaigners try to influence us through our Facebook news feeds, and in the digital messages that appear in our filter bubbles when weāre online,ā Vian Bakir said.
āThis cannot be a healthy state of affairs for any democracy. Voters want to be informed, not manipulated.ā