Study: How to find a racist on Twitter

A new study identified white nationalist Twitter accounts in the U.S. and developed a strategy to track the users who posed the biggest threat.

Sara Inés Calderón | April 4, 2013 | 12:47 am

A study from the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR) in the United Kingdom titled, “Who Matters Online: Measuring influence, evaluating content and countering violent extremism in online social networks” has examined the problem of extremists using social media.

Utilizing white supremacists in the United States as an example, the study isolated several factors that people can use to measure who is worth “keeping an eye on” when it comes to extremism on social media.

The paper created a scoring system that focused on:

  • Influence: The tendency of a user to inspire a measurable reaction from other users (such as a replies or retweets). The study found that this was concentrated to the top 1% of users in the data set.
  • Exposure: The flip side of influence, this is the tendency of a user to respond to another user in a measurable way. High ratings in this area showed a high engagement with the ideology.
  • Interactivity: The sum of influence and exposure scores, roughly representing how often a user interacts with the content of other users. This metric was also correlated to high engagement with ideology.
The paper is very detailed and seems optimistic in the sense that, because this data is easy to track, ideologies represented are easy to either contain or counteract. To read the rest of the report click here.
About Sara Inés Calderón (183 Posts)

Sara Inés Calderón is a journalist and writer who lives between Texas and California. Follow her on Twitter @SaraChicaD.


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  1. […] This post originally appeared on Más Wired. […]

  2. […] only 14% of Twitter users are white, compared to 26% black and 19% Latino. However, as we wrote earlier this year, Twitter is also a vehicle for white nationalist groups to spread their […]


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