Politics, hackers and partisan networking. Misinformation, national utility and free election in the Catalan independence movement
Author(s) -
Miguel Del-Fresno-García,
Juan Luis Manfredi Sánchez
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
el profesional de la informacion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.698
H-Index - 28
eISSN - 1699-2407
pISSN - 1386-6710
DOI - 10.3145/epi.2018.nov.06
Subject(s) - misinformation , catalan , cyberspace , independence (probability theory) , political science , politics , hacker , the internet , internet privacy , law , media studies , sociology , computer security , computer science , humanities , philosophy , statistics , mathematics , world wide web
Misinformation, post-truth and fake news are the consequence of the complex interaction between technological disruption, collective interpersonal communication and sociopolitical action. We analyzed the impact of content produced by the hacktivist Julian Assange [1] and his WikiLeaks organization in support of the Catalan independence process in the last quarter of 2017. A total of 1,708,087 unique results were retrieved from multiple streams of Internet data, of which 99.85% is from Twitter with a 93% viralization rate. The 50 most viral tweets were analyzed qualitatively to identify the underlying misinformation patterns. The research findings show 1) the extent to which such misinformation favors the internal logic, coherence and survival of the independence worldview, whose main value lies in its national utility and 2) misinformation does not use the coercion of lies or falsehoods typical of totalitarian propaganda, but the freedom of citizens to voluntarily engage. [1] We get documented permission from Institutional Review Board for Protection of Human Subjects in Research (IRB) from the UNED.
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