How Bots Can Influence Elections
“Bots are automated computer programs by anonymous people executed to create fake social media accounts, and mimic a real user.” “These fake accounts help sway decisions of a general user’s mind (especially, those of the ‘undecided’)…”
Photo Credit : VentureBeat,
Voting for elections happen around the world, and people choose their favorite candidate based on a lot of factors that stem from research. The most anticipated election last year was voting for the 58th US president. It boiled down to choosing one of the two candidates, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Both nominees have a massive following online, which resonates with their social media support.
This election was similar to previous elections but this time social media, and bots in particular, have a huge role to play. Thanks to how much social media has impacted our lives over the past years. This time around, the fight for the nomination was fought equally both offline and online; online being the most worrisome.
What are Bots and how can they affect an election?
Bots make up almost 50 percent of the Internet traffic. So it’s no surprise they are making their way into politics. Bots are automated computer programs by anonymous people executed to create fake social media accounts, and mimic a real user.
Such bots just help in pushing a message through from thousands of fake Twitter or Facebook accounts, thereby creating a trend. These fake users exist on all social media platforms and have a sole purpose of generating biased trends, unwanted visibility and user engagements. These fake accounts help sway decisions of a general user’s mind (especially, those of the ‘undecided’) by flooding their social media timeline.
One of the main features of bots is to keep a topic relevant through the fast moving trends of the online world.
A message or topic floated around by these accounts, even for a short time, can give them as much user engagements as possible.
Bots' role in Brexit
Bots have already played a role in the Brexit debate. Automated social media accounts created by both sides of the debate created these bots to have a massive influence on the referendum vote. Researchers from Oxford University have found that bots played a strategic role during the debate.
These social media bots just helped in circulating ‘repetitive’ political content to manipulate the thinking of the general public. The role of a social media bot is very simple, they retweet or share the content that they are programmed to, multiple times. Polls before the final Brexit voting had been skewed massively.
As per TwitterAudit, The Real Donald Trump seems to have just 59 percent real active followers out of 10.9 million followers. While his opposition Hillary Clinton has 63 percent real active followers on Twitter out of a 8.33 million followers. That’s 7 million plus fake, inactive followers on twitter amassed by both. These numbers might be just indicative, but do give us an insight on how social media bots can change the course of history. This is a dangerous trend, indeed!
A good amount of these 7 million plus fake, inactive twitter users may be from bots, that can help in propelling the political views across to millions of voters, especially the ‘undecideds’.
Of course there is a downside to these fake bots. You can always go back and check the history and audit the authenticity of the followers. But this is a risk that both the parties are willing to take as it has become a common tool by most social media moguls.
Bots have been causing havoc across all online mediums for more than a decade. It causes monetary losses more than we know. They not only influence the way you think; they influence eCommerce portals, airline booking portals, online publications, and community forums. According to ShieldSquare, 30 percent of the total Web traffic a popular online media site receives is from comment spam.
The source of the bots could remain unknown, but one sure thing is that they are here to stay. These millions of automated bots will keep circulating content across the globe every second. So whatever you read, see and hear online, always take it with a pinch of salt.
This article comes courtesy ShieldSquare, a bot detection startup enterprise based in Bangalore. Find the original version of this article here.
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