Do Platform Migrations Harm the Effectiveness of Content Moderation? Evidence from r/The_Donald and r/Incels

要旨

When toxic online communities on mainstream platforms face moderation measures, such as bans, they may migrate to other platforms with laxer policies or set up their own dedicated website. Previous work suggests that, within mainstream platforms, community-level moderation is effective in mitigating the harm caused by the moderated communities. It is, however, unclear whether these results also hold when considering the broader Web ecosystem. Do toxic communities continue to grow in terms of user base and activity on their new platforms? Do their members become more toxic and ideologically radicalized? In this paper, we report the results of a large-scale observational study of how problematic online communities progress following community-level moderation measures. We analyze data from r/The\_Donald and r/Incels, two communities that were banned from Reddit and subsequently migrated to their own standalone websites. Our results suggest that, in both cases, moderation measures significantly decreased posting activity on the new platform, reducing the number of posts, active users, and newcomers. In spite of that, users in one of the studied communities (r/The\_Donald) showed increases in signals associated with toxicity and radicalization, which justifies concerns that the reduction in activity may come at the expense of a more toxic and radical community. Overall, our results paint a nuanced portrait of the consequences of community-level moderation and can inform their design and deployment.

受賞
Honorable Mention
著者
Manoel Horta Ribeiro
EDIC, Lausanne, Switzerland
Shagun Jhaver
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States
Savvas Zannettou
Max Planck Institute, Saarbrücken, Germany
Jeremy Blackburn
Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York, United States
Emiliano De Cristofaro
University College London, London, United Kingdom
Gianluca Stringhini
Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Robert West
EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3476057

動画

会議: CSCW2021

The 24th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing

セッション: Antisocial Computing

Papers Room A
8 件の発表
2021-10-26 19:00:00
2021-10-26 20:30:00