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Home / World

Race to the White House: Social media influencers push voting misinformation - report

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13 Oct, 2020 10:50 PM4 mins to read

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A ballot drop box stands outside the King County Elections office Tuesday. Photo / AP

A ballot drop box stands outside the King County Elections office Tuesday. Photo / AP

Social media influencers, partisan news outlets and even President Donald Trump's son are driving the spread of online misinformation swirling around the US vote, casting doubt on this year's election and prematurely raising suspicions about the accuracy of its results.

Legitimate US social media accounts are sharing false claims of voter fraud, misleading photos of ballots being dumped in the trash and stoking fears of violence at the polls on Election Day, according to new research from the Election Integrity Partnership, a group of some of the world's top misinformation researchers.

Voters line up outside Richardson City Hall for early voting Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2020, in Richardson, Texas. Photo / AP
Voters line up outside Richardson City Hall for early voting Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2020, in Richardson, Texas. Photo / AP

In some cases, those social media accounts are using isolated or old stories and photos about voting mishaps to create widespread concern about the election system, said Kate Starbird, an associate professor of Human-Centered Design and Engineering at the University of Washington, who is part of the research group.

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"What's happening right now is these incidents are being framed in misleading ways that exaggerate their impact on the election," Starbird said.

In one example, a photo purporting to show stacks of ballots sitting in a dumpster made its way to social media from conservative news outlets before being retweeted on the Twitter account of Donald Trump Jr., the President's eldest son.

"SHOCKING: 1,000+ mail-in ballots found in a dumpster in California," the post said.

That tweet was wrong and later deleted. A spokesperson for Trump Jr. did not immediately provide on-the-record comment about the inaccurate tweet.

Ballots in Sonoma County hadn't even been mailed out yet, and the photo was taken in 2018 of ballots that were properly disposed of after the election, county officials wrote in a Facebook post last month. Still, the claim continues to circulate in some form online. The photo was also shared widely by conservative social media influencers, some of whom have thousands of followers.

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Another image of mail bins and envelopes sitting on the side of the road was used in a viral meme shared by Facebook, Instagram and Twitter users that claimed, "They are finding Trump ballots thrown away all over the place." The photo, in fact, was taken of abandoned mail bins in 2018.

Aprons for election workers who will pick-up ballots from drop boxes are lined-up on a table at the King County Elections office. Photo / AP
Aprons for election workers who will pick-up ballots from drop boxes are lined-up on a table at the King County Elections office. Photo / AP

Facebook has said it is working to curb election-related misinformation by including a label on posts about voting that directs users to state board of election websites, for example. The platform also enlists the help of fact-checking organisations to investigate false or misleading claims around voting and covers those posts if they are found to be untrue. The Associated Press is part of that fact-checking initiative.

Twitter, meanwhile, has promised to label or remove posts entirely that include false claims about election rigging, voter fraud or ballot tampering.

But even when the companies do act on voting misinformation, the posts are often labelled or removed after they've been seen widely. It has taken Twitter and Facebook hours to label misinformation from one of its most visible users: the president, who is a frequent purveyor of misleading claims about widespread voter fraud — despite little evidence of such cases.

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"We can't see how effective these labels are," Starbird said. "I'm not sure that those labels are having a strong effect on the people who need them the most."

Twitter said it is working with the research group on identifying voting misinformation and will take action on posts that undermine the US vote. Facebook did not comment for this story.

A smaller number of liberal social media accounts have also shared out-of-context images of dumped mail to generate distrust around the ability of the US Postal Service to process ballots for this election, the research found. The Postal Service is overseen by an appointee of Trump's.

Trump's opponents responded to social media posts from the President and his campaign calling for an "army" to sign up as poll watchers on Election Day by suggesting it will spur violence at the polls. The research group said headlines from news outlets also amplified those social media concerns about Trump's poll-watching efforts.

That "could be a potential cause of voter suppression if people think there's going to be violence at the polls or there could be a chance for voter intimidation, that might be a cause for them to stay home", said Rachel Moran, a misinformation scholar at the University of Washington.

- AP writers Ali Swenson in Seattle and David Klepper in Providence, R.I., contributed to this report.

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