"Few 'Supersharers' Drive Majority of Misinformation on Twitter"

TL;DR Summary
Two studies published in Science reveal that a small group of "supersharers," primarily older Republican women, were responsible for spreading 80% of misinformation on social media during the 2020 election. The MIT study highlights that exposure to vaccine misinformation significantly reduces vaccination intent, with unflagged misleading content having a greater overall impact than flagged misinformation. The second study identifies 2,107 U.S. voters as the primary spreaders of political fake news, demonstrating the outsized influence of a few individuals on social media.
- Misinformation works, and a handful of social 'supersharers' sent 80% of it in 2020 TechCrunch
- One Action Has Made a Significant Impact on How Misinformation Spreads Online ScienceAlert
- Key misinformation “superspreaders” on Twitter: Older women Ars Technica
- Study shows relatively low number of superspreaders responsible for large portion of misinformation on Twitter Phys.org
- Misinformation posted to Twitter comes from 'superspreader' accounts, say researchers, amid warnings for future of content moderation on X ABC News
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