Recently, there were severe allegations levelled against the social media giants like Facebook and Twitter for aiding the ruling dispensation and undermining democratic values.
Since the introduction of printing press in 15th century, the rapid dissemination of information was hailed as the harbinger of greater liberties. The power of propaganda to bolster up authoritarian forces made its appearance prior to Second World War, but the advent of internet in the late 20th century brought a paradigm shift in how human affairs were conducted. As connectivity increased and boundaries were eroded, social media couldn’t be kept away from politics for long. This first came under the spotlight during the Arab Spring between 2010 and 2012.It was acknowledged then that despite the uneven impact, social media played a pertinent role in ‘mobilization, empowerment, shaping opinions and influencing change’ during the Arab Spring, aiding the transition to democracy. Today the very same social media is accused of promoting social divisions, unfairly influencing democratic outcomes and assisting despotic forces. An attempt at understanding this change can be made by tracing the tryst of Facebook, the social media baron at the eye of current controversies, with democracy and individual liberties.
Facebook statistics 2020 revealed that 2.60 billion people were actively using it, making it the largest social media platform in the world. One of the early experiments in utilising Facebook to influence political outcomes was carried out during the 2012 US Presidential elections. Capitalising on the bandwagon effect with respect to voting, Facebook users were presented with an opportunity to post an ‘I Voted’ icon. Analysts credited an increased voter turnout of 0.4 per cent nationwide to this manipulation. The unbounded potential of this manipulation was realised as studies were conducted analysing the Graph Application Programming Interface (API) used by Facebook in creating psychographic profiles of users based on their activities. A study conducted by University of Cambridge and Stanford revealed that ‘with just 10 “likes”, an algorithm can predict a person’s traits better than a co-worker; with 150, it can do better than a family member; and with 300, better than a spouse.’
The profiles thus developed aid the advertising companies is attracting the right customers while feeding the advertising funded business structure of Facebook.
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The privacy concerns brought forth by the study led Facebook to change its API and limit access to data in 2014. However, the viability of Facebook outreach in election campaigns was soon realised and the misuse of the platform for the same blew into a controversy post the US Presidential elections of 2016 as details of massive misinformation campaign featuring over 3000 Facebook ads sponsored by Russian agencies promoting divisive political messages were uncovered. The social media giant was accused of not only tipping the scales through fake news, but also generating the bulk of the $250 million that funded the Republican’s campaign through online fundraising, eventually leading to a probe that offered no real answers except giving the president a lease of life. Before the issue was laid to rest, Cambridge Analytica fiasco broke out in 2018 when the personal information of almost 87 million people was harvested using Facebook without their consent by Cambridge Analytica, a British political consulting firm, predominantly for the purpose of political advertising. While Facebook paid a hefty sum of $5 billion as fine to the US Federal Trade Commission and implemented a six-point privacy plan, the incident paved way for hot debates on the privacy concerns of social media users which continues to date. Its recent decision to refrain from conducting fact-check on political ads by rationalizing that Facebook doesn’t want to be the arbitrator of truth, has attracted ire. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has time and again reassured the commitment of Facebook to maintain its apolitical nature, but this inadvertently does answer the question that if Facebook wants to, it can definitely be the game changer in elections and determine who runs the government and how.
The crisis is amplified when we add the government into the equation. Government is spending its resources to use internet platforms with the purpose of controlling information flows and communication channels, to serve its purposes and shape public opinion that favours the government.
While Russia weaponised social media in 2016 to influence the outcomes of US Presidential elections, China uses these platforms to garner support for government through spread of propaganda and to track down the dissidents.
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The British army has entrusted its 77th Brigade with the task of focusing on conducting ‘non-lethal psychological operations using Facebook and Twitter’ while Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte hounded his critics by employing his ‘keyboard army’ – a group of social media users ‘patriotically trolling’ anyone who criticises Duterte until they adopt a vow of silence. When Jair Bolsonaro won the Presidential race in Brazil, at the inauguration ceremony, a crowd of his supporters began a surprising chant reciting the names of social media platforms crediting them for his victory. They are right to do so, as a massive disinformation campaign through WhatsApp funded by pro-business conservative group is alleged to have played a major role in tipping the scales in Bolsonaro’s favour.
These are a few examples of many instances when the government has used the social media platforms, most often with their consent, to manipulate the citizens. With foreign meddling, misinformation campaigns, hate speech, echo chambers and creation of less-informed electorate and wrongly informed policy makers undermining the democratic spirit, it is not wrong to point out that social media do share the blame for the current descent of the world into neo-fascism. But this does not change the fact that when it comes to addressing this dilemma, the cause is the cure if used rightly. As pointed out by Zack Beauchamp, senior correspondent at Vox, ‘the social media is a parody of marketplace of ideas where instead of best ideas winning the debate, the good ones are getting drowned out among the bad.’ Hence the key to sustainable use of social media is to make the owners and organisers of these platforms responsible in enforcing the ethics and codes of conduct, while being informed users ourselves. This shall aid the social media to play its part in ensuring the liberty of individuals without undermining democratic principles while keeping Orwellian dystopia at bay.
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