Fake News and The Economy of Emotions: Problems, causes, solutions. Bakir, V. & McStay, A. Digital Journalism, 6(2):154–175, 2018.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
This paper examines the 2016 US presidential election campaign to identify problems with, causes of and solutions to the contemporary fake news phenomenon. To achieve this, we employ textual analysis and feedback from engagement, meetings and panels with technologists, journalists, editors, non-profits, public relations firms, analytics firms and academics during the globally leading technology conference, South-by-South West, in March 2017. We further argue that what is most significant about the contemporary fake news furore is what it portends: the use of personally and emotionally targeted news produced by algo-journalism and what we term “empathic media”. In assessing solutions to this democratically problematic situation, we recommend that greater attention is paid to the role of digital advertising in causing, and combating, both the contemporary fake news phenomenon, and the near-horizon variant of empathically optimised automated fake news. © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
@article{bakir_fake_2018,
	title = {Fake {News} and {The} {Economy} of {Emotions}: {Problems}, causes, solutions},
	volume = {6},
	shorttitle = {Fake {News} and {The} {Economy} of {Emotions}},
	doi = {10.1080/21670811.2017.1345645},
	abstract = {This paper examines the 2016 US presidential election campaign to identify problems with, causes of and solutions to the contemporary fake news phenomenon. To achieve this, we employ textual analysis and feedback from engagement, meetings and panels with technologists, journalists, editors, non-profits, public relations firms, analytics firms and academics during the globally leading technology conference, South-by-South West, in March 2017. We further argue that what is most significant about the contemporary fake news furore is what it portends: the use of personally and emotionally targeted news produced by algo-journalism and what we term “empathic media”. In assessing solutions to this democratically problematic situation, we recommend that greater attention is paid to the role of digital advertising in causing, and combating, both the contemporary fake news phenomenon, and the near-horizon variant of empathically optimised automated fake news. © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor \& Francis Group.},
	number = {2},
	journal = {Digital Journalism},
	author = {Bakir, V. and McStay, A.},
	year = {2018},
	keywords = {Facebook, Trump election, digital advertising, emotion, empathic media, fake news},
	pages = {154--175}
}

Downloads: 0