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[ecrea] Call for Papers - Quaderns del CAC 44
Sat Jan 13 14:31:37 GMT 2018
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
*Quaderns del CAC, number 44, July 2018*
*Fake news, algorithms and filter bubbles***
**
*** Deadline for presentation of articles: April 16, 2018 ***
**
The next issue of the communication journal, Quaderns del CAC, which is
published in three languages, Catalan, Spanish and English, is calling
for papers to be presented for its monographic section.
*Fake news, algorithms and filter bubbles***
Fake news, filter bubbles and algorithms exist separately and can
therefore be analysed. Their current notoriety results from them working
together to create a veritable system that can construct parallel realities.
Fake news has always existed and information has always been
manipulated. But in the previous environment of limited channels of
communication, professionally organised and with institutionalised
counterweights, it was relatively easy to detect what was fake and, if
appropriate, penalise it, applying the rules of editorial
accountability. The internet has radically changed this situation. On
the one hand, distribution channels and devices to access information
have increased exponentially. On the other, the agents producing and
distributing content have also multiplied and their variety increased.
In addition to professionals producing information following a series of
conventions, including separating information from opinion, verifying
facts, triangulation and using a variety of sources as well as
gatekeeping to decide which events and issues are newsworthy, there are
new corporate and individual agents which do not follow, and are not
obliged to follow, any of these rules in carrying out their activity.
A perfect breeding ground for fake news. A large number of agents
generate content for an infinite number of publicly or privately-owned
distribution channels, not subject to rules of editorial accountability
and without the filter of institutionalised professional conventions.
This makes it very difficult to detect and block fake news. Although, in
principle, today's hyperconnected society fosters political transparency
and news pluralism and empowers citizens as never before, the very
profusion of sources and content and the absence of editorial
accountability applicable to all online activity create new risks for
our society. In order to handle the huge amount of content available,
large platforms and social media use search algorithms to propose to
each user a selection of content which matches their preferences,
deduced by algorithms based on the user's digital footprint. The
algorithm acts as a gatekeeper without any kind of transparency in the
criteria applied. Apart from reprehensible biases, users also run the
risk of consuming only the information that matches their world view or
ideology. This can create perverse situations, such as "echo chambers"
or filter bubbles for each user, making them believe they are receiving
/objective information on the world /rather than automatically
pre-selected topics that match their profile. This completes the
virtuous circle that makes fake news so effective.
Fake news is created using a credible design in an online medium that
also has a credible appearance, and it is injected into the
corresponding filter bubbles on social media. Using algorithms, these
bubbles help to quickly spread the fake news item to all like-minded
bubbles that match the bias of the fake news item, often using "bots" to
multiply the effect and thereby helping it to go viral.
An increasing number of citizens, especially young people and minors,
access information solely via this channel. Given the global, instant
and viral nature of such platforms, a fake news item can create
significant states of opinion in large segments of society. The danger
of compartmentalisation is a logical consequence.
Fake news reaches a peak when items go beyond like-minded filter
bubbles. This occurs particularly when traditional media pick them up
and spread them, acting as amplifiers and, worse still, adding a patina
of truthfulness that comes from their status as news media. The
faltering business model of traditional media has contributed to such
episodes, as they now have fewer resources to duly check the facts. This
is also another consequence of using algorithms. Some media use "bots"
with automated algorithms to produce news, which can act as a backdoor
for fake news to enter the traditional media.
Fake news and filter bubbles become particularly important at times of
political polarisation, such as the case of Brexit and the Catalan
independence movement, as well as during election campaigns, such as the
US and France.
Apart from using fake news to influence the state of opinion in favour
of a certain political opinion or commercial interest, also important is
the creation of a veritable fake news industry with great appeal, since
it achieves a large number of hits on a global scale and therefore
attracts advertising revenue.
Algorithms also play a decisive role in the digital communication of
non-news content, both in entertainment and fiction. Using algorithms to
process big data, provided unwittingly by users when they consume,
generates the phenomenon of filter bubbles. Because of this phenomenon,
content is suggested to users that matches their interests, limiting the
diversity of products they access and resulting in a poorer cultural
consumption experience. Equally problematic is the use of algorithms in
the production process, with content design incorporating variables
resulting from processing big data obtained as users consume.
Papers can cover aspects related to the following areas, as well as
combinations thereof:
·Communication
·Journalism
·Legislation and regulations
·Politics and society
·Economics
·Technology
And among other topics:
Concept typification: fake news, post-truth, disinformation
Fake news as a means of political influence
Legislation and the state's role regarding fake news and the
transparency of algorithms
The use of fake news in polarised political or social situations
Frame war in polarised political communication
Sources of information in the social media era
How facts and truth are handled in news discourse
Resources to detect and censure fake news
Credibility of the different news providers
Discourse-based aspects of fake news and disinformation
Mechanisms used to produce and spread fake news
Disinformation and virality
Biases employed by algorithms to decide which subjects are newsworthy
Risks to individual privacy
Ethical problems of authorship and editorial accountability
Filter bubbles and the segmentation of content consumption
The declining diversity of media diet content
Characterising filter bubbles
“Bots” in content generation
The problems of editorial accountability online
The risks of automating news production
Fake news as a business
How “bots” help content go viral
However, we also encourage you to take part in the miscellaneous
"Articles" section, devoted to publishing current research on
audiovisual communication and culture. There is no deadline for papers
for this section.
Papers must be original and unpublished and must not have been submitted
to any other journal. Papers will undergo a double blind peer review and
the publication undertakes to inform authors whether their paper has
been accepted or not within maximum one and a half months after it has
been presented. Papers must be presented in accordance with the
manuscript submissions guidelines
<https://www.cac.cat/pfw_files/cma/recerca/quaderns_cac/Q43_guia_articles_EN.pdf>.
You can send your paper to (quadernsdelcac /at/ gencat.cat)
<mailto:(quadernsdelcac /at/ gencat.cat)>
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