Spanish-language misinformation dogged Democrats in U.S. election
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[November 07, 2020]
By Christopher Bing, Elizabeth Culliford and Paresh Dave
(Reuters) - Spanish-language misinformation
flourished online in the days surrounding the U.S. election, even as
social media companies moved to stem falsehoods that could affect the
vote or spark violence.
Spanish-language social media posts from online celebrities, radio
commentators and others have repeatedly questioned the reliability of
mail-in voting and falsely described presidential candidate Joe Biden as
a socialist, according to Spanish-language disinformation experts and
posts seen by Reuters.
Other postings have pushed QAnon in Spanish, a conspiracy theory that
claims incumbent President Donald Trump is fighting a cabal of "deep
state" sex-traffickers, and describe Biden as a "superpredator" or a
"pedophile," these people said.
Social media companies introduced new rules to crack down on
election-related misinformation through labeling content, restricting
its reach or removing it, but enforcement has been uneven.
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While Alphabet Inc's YouTube, Twitter Inc and Facebook Inc have all
taken action against some false or misleading Spanish-language posts,
many more remain online and have continued to spread, Reuters found.
“On Facebook and the other platforms it takes them longer to flag and
take action when the post is in Spanish than English,” said Daniel
Acosta Ramos, an investigative researcher with First Draft, echoing a
complaint voiced by four other experts who spoke with Reuters.
A Facebook spokeswoman declined to comment on the matter but said the
company had taken multiple steps to combat misinformation in Spanish,
including adding two new Spanish-language fact-checking partners before
the election. She did not address a list of posts and videos shared by
Reuters that appear to violate the company's policies.
Social media researchers also expressed concern about the spread of
misinformation on the WhatsApp messaging service.
Lisa Zayas, a progressive organizer in Florida, provided Reuters with
examples of Spanish-language misinformation spread through multiple
WhatsApp channels used in her local community. The memes and graphics
paint a picture of a Democratic challenger bent on passing laws
"against" the church.
Misinformation on WhatsApp remains especially difficult to study or
counter, since it involves private messages. Zayas said the examples she
noticed typically originated on Facebook, Twitter or YouTube but were
delivered within the chat app.
“There's been other countries who've had democratic elections where
there has been much more disinformation that is peer-to-peer,
specifically India and Brazil, because of the deep penetration of
WhatsApp and so it is possible that it played a role [here],” said Alex
Stamos, a former chief information security officer for Facebook.
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A WhatsApp spokesman said a new policy limiting the forwarding of
messages was an important tool in the misinformation fight.
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A supporter of U.S. President Donald Trump wears a 'Make America
Great Again' cap during the 2020 U.S. presidential election, in
Miami, Florida, U.S., November 4, 2020. REUTERS/Marco Bello/File
Photo
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'SLAVES OF THE MATRIX'
Spanish-speaking voters are a key constituency in multiple
battleground states and Biden's support among those voters was lower
than expected in some regions. In Florida, the Republican Trump won
45% of the Latino vote, an 11-point improvement from 2016.
It is unclear whether such misinformation had any impact on the
Latino vote, which is made up of diverse nationalities and
interests, this year.
Avaaz, a global civic organization, said on Thursday it found at
least 43 Spanish-language posts across social media promoting false
narratives about the election. The content has generated more than
1.4 million social media interactions so far, it added.
The group cited several examples, including two Facebook pages
described as “news and media websites.” Each is respectively named
“Slaves of the Matrix” and “Mr.capacho en vivo” and boast more than
250,000 followers combined. Their posts regularly attract tens of
thousands of viewers and thousands of comments and shares.
The two pages claimed Trump had won re-election, before the ballots
were all counted, that Democrats were trying to steal votes, and
warned of an impending social media blackout. Posts making the false
claims did not receive a fact-check but contained Facebook labels
that directed users to "See Election Updates."
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Media intelligence firm Zignal Labs also told Reuters it had noticed
a flurry of Spanish-language social media and internet forum posts
connecting Biden to pedophilia in the run-up to Nov. 3. They were
spread across multiple internet platforms analyzed by Zignal,
including Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, Instagram, and amateur news
blogs.
Zignal said it found more than 7,000 mentions containing a
combination of the phrases "Biden" or "Hunter" and "pedófilo" on
Election Day and more than 40,000 in the weeks preceding it. It
captured another 12,596 mentions on Tuesday in Spanish referring to
Biden stealing the election.
Many of the posts remain active and have not been removed.
YouTube removed two videos containing Spanish-langauge election
misinformation that had racked up thousands of views after Reuters
flagged them to a spokesperson, who said the company's policies
applied "consistently across all languages and regions."
(Reporting by Christopher Bing in Washington, Elizabeth Culliford in
Birmingham, and Paresh Dave in San Francisco; additional reporting
by Katie Paul in San Francisco; Editing by Chris Sanders and Tom
Brown)
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