THE POLITICS OF DELETION IN THE BREXIT DEBATE

Authors

  • Marco Bastos University College Dublin, Ireland; City, University of London, United Kingdom

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2020i0.11166

Keywords:

Brexit, Life-cycle, Misinformation, Twitter, Web archive

Abstract

Literature on influence operations has identified metrics that are indicative of social media manipulation, but few studies have explored the lifecycle of low-quality information. We contribute to this literature by reconstructing nearly 3M messages posted by 1M users in the last days of the Brexit referendum campaign. While previous studies have found that on average only 4% of tweets disappear, we found that 33% of the tweets leading up to the referendum vote are no longer available. Only about half of the most active accounts that tweeted the referendum continue to operate publicly and 20% of all accounts are no longer active. We tested whether partisan content was more likely to disappear and found more messages from the Leave campaign that disappeared than the entire universe of tweets affiliated with the Remain campaign. We compare these results with a set of 45 hashtags posted in the same period and find that political campaigns present much higher ratios of user and tweet decay. These results are validated by inspecting 2M Brexit-related tweets posted over a period of nearly 4 years. The article concludes with an overview of these findings and recommendations for future research.

Published

2020-10-05

How to Cite

Bastos, M. (2020). THE POLITICS OF DELETION IN THE BREXIT DEBATE. AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research, 2020. https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2020i0.11166

Issue

Section

Papers B