Do algorithms make us even more radical? Filter bubbles and echo chambers

‘Technology ensures that we’re all served our own personalised news cycle. As a result, we only get to hear the opinions that correspond to our own. The result is polarisation’. Or so the oft-heard theory goes. But in practice, it seems this isn’t really true, or at least not for the average Dutch person. However, according to communication scientist Judith Möller, the influence of filter bubbles, as they are known, could indeed be stronger when it comes to groups with radical opinions.

Judith Möller: ‘My theory is that filter bubbles do indeed exist, but that we’re looking for them in the wrong place.’

First of all, we need to differentiate between the so-called echo chamber and the filter bubble. As an individual, you voluntarily take your place in an echo chamber (such as in the form of a forum, or a Facebook or WhatsApp group), meaning you surround yourself with people who tend towards the same opinion as yourself. ‘Call it the modern form of compartmentalisation’, says communication scientist Judith Möller, who recently received a Veni grant for her research. ‘People have always had the tendency to surround themselves with like-minded people, and that’s no different on social media.’

Various news sources in parallel prevent a filter bubble

In the filter bubble, you are presented only with news and opinions that match you as an individual, on the basis of algorithms and without you being aware of this process. It’s said that this bubble is leading to the polarisation of society. Everyone is constantly exposed to ‘their own truth’, while other news gets filtered out. But Möller says that there is no evidence to support this, at least in the Netherlands. ‘We use various news sources in parallel – meaning not only Facebook and Twitter, but also radio, television and newspapers, so we run little risk of ending up in a filter bubble. Besides that: the amount of “news” on an average Facebook timeline is less than 5%. Moreover, it turns out that many people on social media are actually more likely to encounter news that they normally wouldn’t read or search out, so that’s almost a bubble in reverse.’

Bubbles at the fringes of the opinion spectrum

Nonetheless, a great deal of money is being invested in the use of algorithms and artificial intelligence, such as during election periods. Möller: ‘So there must be something in it. My theory is that filter bubbles do indeed exist, but that we’re looking for them in the wrong place. We shouldn’t look at the mainstream, but at groups with radical and/or divergent opinions who don’t fit into the “centre”. This is where we see the formation of ‘fringe bubbles’, as I call them – filters at the edges of the opinion spectrum.’

People with fringe opinions can suddenly become very visible

From spiral of silence to spiral of noise

As one example, the researcher cites the anti-vaccination movement. ‘Previously, this group was confronted with the ‘spiral of silence’: if you said in public, for instance to friends or family, that you were sceptical about vaccination, you wouldn’t get a positive response. And so, you’d keep quiet about it. But this group found each other on social media, and as a consequence of filter technology, the proponents of this view encountered the ‘spiral of noise’: suddenly it seems as if a huge number of people agree with you.’

The news value of radical and divergent opinions

And so, it can happen that people with fringe, radical or divergent opinions suddenly become very vocal and visible. ‘Then they become newsworthy, they appear in normal news media and hence are able to address a wider public. The fringe bubble shifts towards the centre. This has been the case with the anti-vaccination movement, the climate sceptics and the yellow vests, but it also happened with the group who opposed the Dutch Intelligence and Security Services Act – no-one was interested initially, but in the end, it became major news and it even resulted in a referendum.’

Consequences can be both positive and negative

‘In my research I aim to go in search of divergent opinions like these, and then I’ll try to determine how algorithms influence radical groups, to what extent filter bubbles exist and why groups with radical opinions ultimately manage, or don’t manage, to appear in news media.’
The consequences of these processes can be both positive and negative, believes Möller. ‘Some people claim that this attention leads people from the “centre” to feel attracted to the fringe areas of society, in turn leading to more extreme opinions and a reduction in social cohesion, which is certainly possible. On the other hand, this process also brings advantages: after all, in a democracy we also need to listen to minority opinions.’

Source: Do algorithms make us even more radical? – University of Amsterdam

To find out how researchers track the filter bubble, read about fbtrex here (pdf)

Personalisation algorithms and elections: Breaking free of the filter bubble

In recent years, we have been witnessing a fundamental shift in the form how news and current affairs are disseminated and mediated. Due to the exponential increase in available content online and technological development in the field of recommendation systems, more and more citizens are informing themselves through customized and curated sources, while turning away from mass-mediated information sources like TV news and newspapers. Algorithmic recommendation systems provide news users with tools to navigate the information overload and identify important and relevant information. They do so by performing a task that was once a key part of the journalistic profession: keeping the gates. In a way, news recommendation algorithm can create highly individualized gates, through which only information and news fit that serves the user best. In theory, this is a great achievement that can make news exposure more efficient and interesting. In practice, there are many pitfalls when the power to select what we hear from the news shifts from professional editorial boards that select the news according to professional standards to opaque algorithms who are reigned by their own logic, the logic of advertisers or consumes personal preferences.

Beyond the filter bubble: Concepts, myths, evidence and issues for future debates

Filter bubbles in the Netherlands?

Some fear that personalised communication can lead to information cocoons or filter bubbles. For instance, a personalised news website could give more prominence to conservative or liberal media items, based on the (assumed) political interests of the user. As a result, users may encounter only a limited range of political ideas. We synthesise empirical research on the extent and effects of self-selected personalisation, where people actively choose which content they receive, and pre-selected personalisation, where algorithms personalise content for users without any deliberate user choice. We conclude that at present there is little empirical evidence that warrants any worries about filter bubbles.

Should We Worry about Filter Bubbles?

Pop the filter bubble: Exposure Diversity as a Design Principle for Search and Social Media

Michael Bang Peterson and a few others from the US have some interesting counterpoints to this.

Source: New Research Shows Social Media Doesn’t Turn People Into Assholes (They Already Were), And Everyone’s Wrong About Echo Chambers

Trying to change the Dutch home copy tax

The representatives of producers and importers of consumer electronics (NLdigital, NLconnect, TechniekNederland, FIAR CE and STOBI) have asked Minister Dekker to take a closer look at the current home copying system. The trade associations believe that the protection of copyright through this regulation is increasingly out of step with the technical and economic reality.

NLdigital asks Minister Dekker to evaluate the current regulation for the private copying compensation as soon as possible and to revise it in time for the decision-making on tariffs for the period 2023-2026. Part of the evaluation is the question whether European legislation is still in line with the current media use of consumers, whether the total revenues from the private copying tax are still in proportion to the actual damage suffered and what the impact is of new techniques and forms of distribution now and the near future.

[…]
technology has eliminated the need for home copying. Making music or series available offline through online (music and video services) is not the same as an old-fashioned copy. The offline music or video is part of the contract with the provider.

In the worst case, you pay three times: once for the subscription to your streaming service, one charge on the smartphone with which you stream and then extra storage because that smartphone automatically makes a backup in the cloud. That has nothing to do with damage suffered. It seems to be looking for ways to continue to collect money while the damage is no longer as great as it used to be, the organizations say.

[…]
Under the leadership of NLconnect, those obliged to pay have turned against this proposal. After all, legally, this function does not involve a private copy: the package provider makes a master copy that is streamed to various subscribers. Rightholders can already exercise the prohibition right for this functionality and a private copying levy would therefore mean a double payment by the consumer. The parties obliged to pay conclude that SONT has rightly excluded the nPVR functionality from the decision.

 

Source: Weer ophef over Thuiskopievergoeding – Emerce

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