Effects of #coronavirus content moderation on misinformation and anti-Asian hate on Instagram

Files
2023_NewMedia_Society.pdf(939.91 KB)
Published version
Date
2023-08-04
Authors
Hong, Traci
Tang, Zilu
Lu, Manyuan
Wang, Yunwen
Wu, Jiaxi
Wijaya, Derry
Version
Published version
OA Version
Citation
T. Hong, Z. Tang, M. Lu, Y. Wang, J. Wu, D. Wijaya. "Effects of #coronavirus content moderation on misinformation and anti-Asian hate on Instagram" New Media and Society. https://doi.org/10.1177/14614448231187529
Abstract
This study evaluated the intended and unintended effects of Instagram’s content moderation on #coronavirus for both the short- and long-term effects on misinformation and anti-Asian sentiment. We performed manual coding of images ( N = 9648), and a series of supervised machine learning methods to classify three waves of comments ( N = 22,676) published in 2020 on Instagram. Welch’s F tests were used to compare misinformation, emotions, toxicity, and identity attack across three time periods. The results showed that hashtag moderation had an intended effect in reducing misinformation, and an unintended effect in reducing anger, fear, toxicity, and identity attack. Images with people of East Asian descent were associated with more anger, fear, toxicity, and identity attack than images with people of other races. Prior to content moderation, misinformation was associated with identity attack. Stigmatization on social media, and content moderation of misinformation and hate speech are discussed.
Description
License
© The Author(s) 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International.