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Propaganda through media

Propaganda is a form of persuasion that is often used in media to further some sort of agenda, such as a personal, political, or business agenda, by evoking an emotional or obligable response from the audience.[1] It includes the deliberate sharing of realities, views, and philosophies intended to alter behavior and stimulate people to act.[2]

Public reading of the anti-Semitic newspaper Der Stürmer, Worms, Nazi Germany, 1935

To explain the close associations between media and propaganda, Richard Alan Nelson observed propaganda as a form of persuasion with intention with the aid of controlled transmission of single-sided information through mass media.[3] Mass media and propaganda are inseparable.

Mass media, as a system for spreading and relaying information and messages to the public, plays a role in amusing, entertaining and informing individuals with rules and values that situate them in social structure.[4] Therefore, propaganda creates conflicts among society's differing classes. Nowadays, in a media engulfed society, mass media is the main platform and output for carrying out acts of propaganda and for pushing forward agendas.

Today, various amounts of modern media can be used to supply propaganda to its intended audience such as, radio, television, films posters handouts music smartphones, just to name a few.[5]

Origins edit

Spoken forms of propaganda can exist in an oral-biased society.[6]

"Propaganda" has a negative connotation in a modern political context. Despite that, the word entered language with religious origins. Pope Gregory XV established an institution for spreading the faith and addressing a series of church affairs, which is namely the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. Further, a College of Propaganda was set up under Pope Urban VIII to train priests for missions.[6]

 
America's Best Comics #7 July 1944. With the war in full swing, patriotically themed comic books were an important source of propaganda.

Throughout history, propaganda has always been evident in momentum social movements such as American independence, the French Revolution,[6] and especially during wartimes. Wartime propaganda is often demanded for shaping public opinions to gain more allies on an international level, as well as calling for citizens to make a contribution and sacrifice to the war on a domestic level. Propaganda was used in the media when the thirteen colonies were trying to separate from Britain. One example from this time period, is the Boston Massacre. After this event, the colonist began putting forms of propaganda into the newspapers in an attempt to get more people to rebel against the British.[7]

Governments during the First World War devoted massive resources and huge amounts of effort to producing material designed to shape opinion and action internationally.[8] As Clark claimed,[9] posters in wartime with some visual codes are powerful tools to make people adapt to the new conditions and norms arising from the wars and to accommodate the needs of the war. During the Second World War, the power of propaganda came to the extreme, under the horrors of Nazi Germany. And since then, the word carries more negative connotations than neutral.[10]

Social media edit

With the widespread use of social media platforms, they have become powerful tools for propaganda. Propaganda is promoted on social media by dozens of governments.[11] The Economist reported that in 2020, 81 countries waged "organised disinformation campaigns", up from 27 in 2017.[12]

Another element that makes social media effective for sharing propaganda is that it can reach many people with little effort and users can filter the content to remove content they do not want while retaining what they would like to see.[13] This ease of use can be used by ordinary people as well as government agencies and politicians, who can take advantage of the platforms to spread "junk" news in favor of their cause.[14]

Facebook edit

Syria edit

The Facebook pages of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the National Coalition of Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces in 2013 and 2014, uses images to promote their agendas relating to politics during the conflicts following 2011 uprisings in Syria.[15] Their government uses visual frames to help support the image that President Assad is a "fearless leader protecting its people and that life has continued normally through Syria," and to help strengthen the images of the violence and sufferings of the civilians caused by the Assad regime.[15]

Uganda edit

The Economist reported that, shortly before the 2021 Ugandan general election, Facebook removed a network of government-linked accounts engaged in "coordinated inauthentic behavior" to boost support for Yoweri Museveni, the incumbent president.[12]

United States edit

In 2011, The Guardian reported that the United States Central Command (Centcom) was working with HBGary to develop software that would allow the US government to "secretly manipulate social media sites by using fake online personas to influence internet conversations and spread pro-American propaganda." A Centcom spokesman stated that the "interventions" were not targeting any US-based web sites, in English or any other language, and also said that the propaganda campaigns were not targeting Facebook or Twitter.[16][17]

In 2013, the Smith-Mundt Act, colloquially known as the "anti-propaganda law"[18] was amended.[19] The amendment repealed the Smith-Mundt's act ban on disseminating "information and material about the United States intended primarily for foreign audiences".[19][18] Some advocates of repealing the anti-propaganda law did so in the name of "transparency", an approach that The Atlantic called "a remarkably creative spin".[20] Michael Hastings suggested that the Smith-Mundt Modernization Act "would open the door to Pentagon propaganda of U.S. audiences",[18] while a Pentagon official was quoted as saying that "'senior public affairs' officers within the Department of Defense want to 'get rid' of Smith-Mundt and other restrictions because it prevents information activities designed to prop up unpopular policies—like the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."[21]

In October 2018, The Daily Telegraph reported that Facebook "banned hundreds of pages and accounts which it says were fraudulently flooding its site with partisan political content – although they came from the US instead of being associated with Russia."[22]

in 2022, the Stanford Internet Observatory and Graphika studied datasets of banned accounts on Facebook, Instagram, and other social media platforms that used deceptive tactics to promote pro-Western narratives.[23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30] The Meta dataset included 39 Facebook profiles, 16 pages, two groups, and 26 Instagram accounts.[23][31] Meta claimed that "individuals associated with the US military" were linked to the propaganda campaign.[31]

Twitter edit

Russia edit

During the 2016 presidential election, 200,000 tweets deemed as "malicious activity" from Russia-linked accounts were outed on Twitter. The accounts pushed hundreds of thousands of these tweets claiming that Democrats were practicing witchcraft and posed as Black Lives Matter activists. Investigators were able to trace the account to a Kremlin-linked propaganda outfit. It was founded in 2013 and known as the Internet Research Agency (IRA).[32]

Saudi Arabia edit

The New York Times reported in late October 2018 that Saudi Arabia used an online army of Twitter trolls.[33]

United States edit

In 2011, The Guardian reported that the United States Central Command (Centcom) was working with HBGary to develop software that would allow the US government to "secretly manipulate social media sites by using fake online personas to influence internet conversations and spread pro-American propaganda." A Centcom spokesman stated that the "interventions" were not targeting any US-based web sites, in English or any other language, and also said that the propaganda campaigns were not targeting Facebook or Twitter.[16][17]

In 2022, the Stanford Internet Observatory and Graphika studied banned accounts on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and five other social media platforms that used deceptive tactics to promote pro-Western narratives.[23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30] The dataset analyzed by Stanford contained 299,566 Tweets from 146 accounts. Vice News noted that "U.S. leaning social media influence campaigns are, ultimately, very similar to those run by adversarial countries.",[23] while NBC News mentioned that "The campaigns used many of the same tactics that researchers frequently see in similar information operations aimed at denigrating the U.S. and its allies...those include creating fake personas with artificially generated profiles that had accounts across multiple platforms and creating fake news sites that frequently plagiarized articles from elsewhere on the internet."[24]

The Intercept reported in December 2022 that the United States military ran a "network of social media accounts and online personas", and that Twitter whitelisted a batch of accounts upon the request of the United States government.[34][35]

Terrorism edit

"Using little-known content uploading services, anonymous text-pasting sites and multiple backup Twitter accounts, a select group of ISIS operatives managed to evade administrators' controls to spread the Cantlie video, titled Lend Me Your Ears, around the web within a few hours."[36]

In another example of propaganda, Abdulrahman, the operator al-Hamid used the techniques of hashtagging in a Twitter post to gain the heat of the topics to disseminate the information. A great deal of followers of Hamid on Twitter were demanded to find the highest trending topics in the UK and popular account names they could jump on to get the largest possible reach. As @Abu_Laila wrote: "We need those who can supply us with the most active hashtags in the UK. And also the accounts of the most famous celebrities. I believe that the hashtag of Scotland's separation from Britain should be the first."[36]

YouTube edit

In the journal Society, The "cyber-extremism" of ISIS is discussed. One topic analyzed is the fact that ISIS post videos tailored to appeal to extremists: "they make these videos in a way to entice people who are vulnerable to extremist ways."[37]

In 2017, the New York Times reported the release of a North Korean propaganda video on YouTube. The video was "mainly depicting a United States aircraft carrier and a warplane being destroyed in computer-generated balls of fire, the latest salvo in an escalating war of words between the two. The video released by a state media outlet is narrated by a woman and including images of North Korea’s military. According to the video, North Korea’s missiles will be "stabbed into the throat of the carrier," and the jet will "fall from the sky," it warns."[38]

Research on propaganda in social media edit

In 2017 the University of Oxford launched the Computational Propaganda Research Project, a series of studies researching how social media are globally used to manipulate public opinion.[39] The study, which used interviews and "tens of millions posts on seven different social media platforms during scores of elections, political crises, and national security incidents", found that in Russia, approximately 45% of Twitter accounts are bots and in Taiwan, a campaign against President Tsai Ing-wen involved thousands of accounts being heavily coordinated and sharing Chinese propaganda.[40]

Techniques to like, share, and post on social networks were used. The bot accounts were used to "game algorithms" to push different content on the platforms. Real content put out by real people can be covered up and bots can make online measures of support, such as the number of likes or retweets something has received, look larger than it should, thus tricking users into thinking that specific piece of content is popular, a process identified as manufacturing consensus.[39]

There is also research that "cloaked" Facebook accounts are behind the creation of spreading political propaganda online to "imitate the identity of an opponent so they can spark hateful and aggressive reactions" from the media and the opponent.[41] The process goes after a case study on a Danish Facebook pages that are cloaking their pages to resemble radical Islamist pages to help "[provoke] racist and anti-Muslim reactions as well as negative sentiments towards refugees and immigrants in Denmark."[41] The researchers discussed the epistemological, methodological and conceptual challenges of online propaganda. The information also adds to the reader's "understanding of disinformation and propaganda in an increasingly interactive social media environment and contributes to a critical inquiry into social media and subversive politics."[41]

Music edit

Music has always played a major role in popular culture. Political ideology is often spread through media; however, the use of music reaches an extremely wide and varying audience. The point of propaganda, according to Manzaria and Bruck, is to “Persuade people’s attitude, beliefs, and behaviors”.[42] Music of all genres is constantly being used to portray a political view, shed light, or bring validity to a subject the author, or artist, feels is worth venturing. Propaganda through modes like advertisement and campaign, while effective, will only reach a small group of the desired recipients.

A form of music that focuses the most on propaganda is the patriotic and war music from any one country. With songs like "Slavic Woman's Farewell", "Over There", "God Bless the USA", " Fortunate Son", and Jimi Hendrix's cover of the American national anthem, these songs are designed to provoke an emotion of either respect and patriotism for your country, or rebellion and disgust at your country's actions. To quote the Chicago Tribune, patriotic songs are designed to, "make us feel good about our country even when our country does something we believe is wrong."[43]

According to Putman, musical propaganda has a great deal to do with the audience.[44] Each musical genre can reach a specific demographic within a few minutes, along with the propaganda intertwined. Purfleau brings a more social view to the concept of politically motivated music, stating that musical propaganda is "the basis for a certain kind of political art that aspires to contest the contemporary economic and social order".[45] Purfleau's approach to understanding musical propaganda explains the timeless manner by which music has been used to portray viewpoints. Though music is not always the first media thought of when contemplating propaganda, it is an extremely effective mode and has proved to influence popular culture throughout human history.

Manufactured consent edit

Edward S. Herman's and Noam Chomsky's book titled “Manufacturing Consent[46] tackles this notion as Chomsky uses the analogy of a media machine that divide methods used by media into five different filters, including how media works through ownership, advertising, media-elite, flack and an agreed upon common enemy.

The relationship between viewer and broadcaster- consumer and producer in the context of media, has been explored since the beginning of mass communication. This has been carried out not only arguing how the invention of the television changed the make-up of households, but also how news outlets and the Internet have become powerful tools in pushing propaganda and selected information on consumers. Manufactured spaces in media create "information bubbles" through mechanisms such as algorithmic capitalism. They seek to control the ideologies of consumers by bombarding them with information that is leaning to one side whilst depriving them of objectivity. Mass media is selective and influential in its content shared to consumers.

Ownership looks at how people in power and those affected by information brought to the media seek to either destroy it or "spin" it around to maintain self-image and power. Media outlets need consumers to attract advertisers. These two filters are dependent on the media elite and flack to function due to the fact that the media elite are journalists and other people with access to platforms that are essentially hand picked due to the fact that they play by the rules set by the owners with regards to how and what information is shared. Flack on the other hand are those Chomsky proposes to be defamed by those in power or not even given access to a platform simply because their information is too critical or that it threatens ownership, advertisers and revenue in general. The use of having a common enemy is one most identified in politics and can be described as a scapegoat used to justify decisions made by people in power. Hence, the basic concept of Herman's and Chomsky's idea is that these filters illustrate how media can be selective about information and why they are motivated to do so.

With that said, the danger behind filtered information is highlighted in the sense that it creates “ideological polarization”- a phenomenon within a society that “has dominated both popular and academic debates” (Sphor 2017).[47] A truly simplified example of this phenomenon would be the political system in the United States of America and the “self placement between…Democrats and Republicans” the key word in this context being self-placement, as society is grouped and divided into two schools of thoughts. This black and white fallacy is the backbone to the polarization effect observed in society's thinking.

Advertising edit

Emphasis and Repression in Advertising edit

Media companies use advertising to advance propaganda. Studies have reported that organisations use advertising to promote economic propaganda by influencing how consumers perceive brands. Ideally, consumers need to have access to all the necessary information that is required to make purchase decisions. On the contrary, advertisements contain positive and exaggerated information that is intended to convince a consumer to buy a particular product.[48] Many adverts are known to include phrases such as "50 percent stronger" or "Less than 30 percent fat,” which are highly emphasised. These statements mislead consumers who fail to take into account the shortcomings associated with products that are typically repressed in the advert while focusing on exaggerated features.[49] Accordingly, this strategy amounts to propaganda since companies use it to cause consumers to make irrational decisions by intentional influencing.

Reference through Name Calling edit

Name-calling has traditionally existed as a common technique in advertising, as it involves making statements that demean and undermine a competitor without necessarily being true.[48] Common brand names such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi have been known to engage in name-calling.[50] The two companies often come up with advertisements that undermine the products that the other offers. Similarly, Burger King ran an ad that featured its sandwich “The Whopper” being bigger than the box that McDonald's uses in packing its “Big Mac” hamburger.[51] These examples underscore how companies have resorted to using name-calling in advertising rather than highlighting how their products would benefit the consumer. Consequently, these organisations manage to persuade and manipulate consumers into making purchase decisions based on misleading information.

Bandwagon edit

Companies increasingly use the technique in advertising their products and services. This method seeks to convince a consumer to make a purchase decision out of the fear of being left out.[52] Claiming that millions of consumers are using their products or services and that it would be a mistake not to be part of the trend. In 1994, McDonald's featured an advert that claimed that the fast-food company had served 99 billion customers since its inception. While such a claim may be valid, such information is not meant to allow a consumer to make a rational purchase decision.[53] Instead, these statements are designed to cause people to buy products that they do not necessarily need for the mere reason of not being the one left out. Bandwagon propaganda has, therefore, become a central aspect of modern advertising.

Glittering Generality edit

Another common propaganda technique that is often used in advertising is glittering generality. This approach involves using statements that contain phrases that the consumer would immediately consider valuable without further analysis.[citation needed] When used effectively, this strategy allows a company to use its adverts in appealing to consumers emotionally rather than helping them to make rational decisions. Some of the most common terms that are used in advertising to elicit immediate positive feelings among consumers include better and best.[50] An advert may emphasise that the product is the best for the consumer without necessarily indicating the reason why and how the consumer would benefit from making the purchase. Since consumers want to acquire the best products and services, they choose to buy such items without analysing whether the claims are valid. The ability to trigger a positive reaction on the consumer forms the basis of glittering generality in advertising.

Transfer Propaganda edit

Entailing advertisement to projecting positive or negative feelings that a person has regarding a specific idea or person to another.[54] The goal of transfer propaganda in advertising is to cause the consumer to associate a product with positive or negative qualities such as patriotism and nationalism in their product evaluation.[55] An advert that emphasizes patriotism, for instance, might be designed to cause consumers to buy a product out of the love that they have for their country. Companies take advantage of the fact that people value some things and that they detest others in shaping marketing campaigns.

Testimonial Advertising edit

Advertisements across the world also contain aspects of testimonial propaganda. Notably, this strategy involves including influential people, as well as authority figures and experts, in adverts to attract the attention of consumers.[54] A toothpaste advert that claims that 99 percent of dentists would recommend the product is an example of how testimonial propaganda occurs in advertising. Similarly, companies or campaigns are known to use celebrities in endorsing different products through both traditional and modern advertising channels.[56] A billboard containing the picture of a famous footballer holding a ball could, for instance, create the impression that the celebrity prefers the specific brand. In such cases, companies may persuade and manipulate consumers into believing that their products have been tested and approved by authority figures.[52] An understanding of how testimonial advertising affects consumers is, therefore, helpful in assessing why companies use it.

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Jacques Ellul, Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes. Trans. Konrad Kellen & Jean Lerner. New York: Knopf, 1965. New York: Random House/ Vintage 1973
  • The Techniques of Propaganda
  • Defining Propaganda II
  • Media's Use of Propaganda to Persuade People's Attitude, Beliefs and Behaviors 2020-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Computational Propaganda Project at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford

References edit

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propaganda, through, media, propaganda, form, persuasion, that, often, used, media, further, some, sort, agenda, such, personal, political, business, agenda, evoking, emotional, obligable, response, from, audience, includes, deliberate, sharing, realities, vie. Propaganda is a form of persuasion that is often used in media to further some sort of agenda such as a personal political or business agenda by evoking an emotional or obligable response from the audience 1 It includes the deliberate sharing of realities views and philosophies intended to alter behavior and stimulate people to act 2 Public reading of the anti Semitic newspaper Der Sturmer Worms Nazi Germany 1935To explain the close associations between media and propaganda Richard Alan Nelson observed propaganda as a form of persuasion with intention with the aid of controlled transmission of single sided information through mass media 3 Mass media and propaganda are inseparable Mass media as a system for spreading and relaying information and messages to the public plays a role in amusing entertaining and informing individuals with rules and values that situate them in social structure 4 Therefore propaganda creates conflicts among society s differing classes Nowadays in a media engulfed society mass media is the main platform and output for carrying out acts of propaganda and for pushing forward agendas Today various amounts of modern media can be used to supply propaganda to its intended audience such as radio television films posters handouts music smartphones just to name a few 5 Contents 1 Origins 2 Social media 2 1 Facebook 2 1 1 Syria 2 1 2 Uganda 2 1 3 United States 2 2 Twitter 2 2 1 Russia 2 2 2 Saudi Arabia 2 2 3 United States 2 2 4 Terrorism 2 3 YouTube 2 4 Research on propaganda in social media 3 Music 4 Manufactured consent 5 Advertising 5 1 Emphasis and Repression in Advertising 5 2 Reference through Name Calling 5 3 Bandwagon 5 4 Glittering Generality 5 5 Transfer Propaganda 5 6 Testimonial Advertising 6 See also 7 Further reading 8 ReferencesOrigins editSee also History of propaganda Spoken forms of propaganda can exist in an oral biased society 6 Propaganda has a negative connotation in a modern political context Despite that the word entered language with religious origins Pope Gregory XV established an institution for spreading the faith and addressing a series of church affairs which is namely the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith Further a College of Propaganda was set up under Pope Urban VIII to train priests for missions 6 nbsp America s Best Comics 7 July 1944 With the war in full swing patriotically themed comic books were an important source of propaganda Throughout history propaganda has always been evident in momentum social movements such as American independence the French Revolution 6 and especially during wartimes Wartime propaganda is often demanded for shaping public opinions to gain more allies on an international level as well as calling for citizens to make a contribution and sacrifice to the war on a domestic level Propaganda was used in the media when the thirteen colonies were trying to separate from Britain One example from this time period is the Boston Massacre After this event the colonist began putting forms of propaganda into the newspapers in an attempt to get more people to rebel against the British 7 Governments during the First World War devoted massive resources and huge amounts of effort to producing material designed to shape opinion and action internationally 8 As Clark claimed 9 posters in wartime with some visual codes are powerful tools to make people adapt to the new conditions and norms arising from the wars and to accommodate the needs of the war During the Second World War the power of propaganda came to the extreme under the horrors of Nazi Germany And since then the word carries more negative connotations than neutral 10 Social media editWith the widespread use of social media platforms they have become powerful tools for propaganda Propaganda is promoted on social media by dozens of governments 11 The Economist reported that in 2020 81 countries waged organised disinformation campaigns up from 27 in 2017 12 Another element that makes social media effective for sharing propaganda is that it can reach many people with little effort and users can filter the content to remove content they do not want while retaining what they would like to see 13 This ease of use can be used by ordinary people as well as government agencies and politicians who can take advantage of the platforms to spread junk news in favor of their cause 14 Facebook edit Syria edit The Facebook pages of Syrian President Bashar al Assad and the National Coalition of Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces in 2013 and 2014 uses images to promote their agendas relating to politics during the conflicts following 2011 uprisings in Syria 15 Their government uses visual frames to help support the image that President Assad is a fearless leader protecting its people and that life has continued normally through Syria and to help strengthen the images of the violence and sufferings of the civilians caused by the Assad regime 15 Uganda edit The Economist reported that shortly before the 2021 Ugandan general election Facebook removed a network of government linked accounts engaged in coordinated inauthentic behavior to boost support for Yoweri Museveni the incumbent president 12 United States edit In 2011 The Guardian reported that the United States Central Command Centcom was working with HBGary to develop software that would allow the US government to secretly manipulate social media sites by using fake online personas to influence internet conversations and spread pro American propaganda A Centcom spokesman stated that the interventions were not targeting any US based web sites in English or any other language and also said that the propaganda campaigns were not targeting Facebook or Twitter 16 17 In 2013 the Smith Mundt Act colloquially known as the anti propaganda law 18 was amended 19 The amendment repealed the Smith Mundt s act ban on disseminating information and material about the United States intended primarily for foreign audiences 19 18 Some advocates of repealing the anti propaganda law did so in the name of transparency an approach that The Atlantic called a remarkably creative spin 20 Michael Hastings suggested that the Smith Mundt Modernization Act would open the door to Pentagon propaganda of U S audiences 18 while a Pentagon official was quoted as saying that senior public affairs officers within the Department of Defense want to get rid of Smith Mundt and other restrictions because it prevents information activities designed to prop up unpopular policies like the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan 21 In October 2018 The Daily Telegraph reported that Facebook banned hundreds of pages and accounts which it says were fraudulently flooding its site with partisan political content although they came from the US instead of being associated with Russia 22 in 2022 the Stanford Internet Observatory and Graphika studied datasets of banned accounts on Facebook Instagram and other social media platforms that used deceptive tactics to promote pro Western narratives 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 The Meta dataset included 39 Facebook profiles 16 pages two groups and 26 Instagram accounts 23 31 Meta claimed that individuals associated with the US military were linked to the propaganda campaign 31 Twitter edit Russia edit During the 2016 presidential election 200 000 tweets deemed as malicious activity from Russia linked accounts were outed on Twitter The accounts pushed hundreds of thousands of these tweets claiming that Democrats were practicing witchcraft and posed as Black Lives Matter activists Investigators were able to trace the account to a Kremlin linked propaganda outfit It was founded in 2013 and known as the Internet Research Agency IRA 32 Saudi Arabia edit The New York Times reported in late October 2018 that Saudi Arabia used an online army of Twitter trolls 33 United States edit In 2011 The Guardian reported that the United States Central Command Centcom was working with HBGary to develop software that would allow the US government to secretly manipulate social media sites by using fake online personas to influence internet conversations and spread pro American propaganda A Centcom spokesman stated that the interventions were not targeting any US based web sites in English or any other language and also said that the propaganda campaigns were not targeting Facebook or Twitter 16 17 In 2022 the Stanford Internet Observatory and Graphika studied banned accounts on Twitter Facebook Instagram and five other social media platforms that used deceptive tactics to promote pro Western narratives 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 The dataset analyzed by Stanford contained 299 566 Tweets from 146 accounts Vice News noted that U S leaning social media influence campaigns are ultimately very similar to those run by adversarial countries 23 while NBC News mentioned that The campaigns used many of the same tactics that researchers frequently see in similar information operations aimed at denigrating the U S and its allies those include creating fake personas with artificially generated profiles that had accounts across multiple platforms and creating fake news sites that frequently plagiarized articles from elsewhere on the internet 24 The Intercept reported in December 2022 that the United States military ran a network of social media accounts and online personas and that Twitter whitelisted a batch of accounts upon the request of the United States government 34 35 Terrorism edit Using little known content uploading services anonymous text pasting sites and multiple backup Twitter accounts a select group of ISIS operatives managed to evade administrators controls to spread the Cantlie video titled Lend Me Your Ears around the web within a few hours 36 In another example of propaganda Abdulrahman the operator al Hamid used the techniques of hashtagging in a Twitter post to gain the heat of the topics to disseminate the information A great deal of followers of Hamid on Twitter were demanded to find the highest trending topics in the UK and popular account names they could jump on to get the largest possible reach As Abu Laila wrote We need those who can supply us with the most active hashtags in the UK And also the accounts of the most famous celebrities I believe that the hashtag of Scotland s separation from Britain should be the first 36 YouTube edit In the journal Society The cyber extremism of ISIS is discussed One topic analyzed is the fact that ISIS post videos tailored to appeal to extremists they make these videos in a way to entice people who are vulnerable to extremist ways 37 In 2017 the New York Times reported the release of a North Korean propaganda video on YouTube The video was mainly depicting a United States aircraft carrier and a warplane being destroyed in computer generated balls of fire the latest salvo in an escalating war of words between the two The video released by a state media outlet is narrated by a woman and including images of North Korea s military According to the video North Korea s missiles will be stabbed into the throat of the carrier and the jet will fall from the sky it warns 38 Research on propaganda in social media edit In 2017 the University of Oxford launched the Computational Propaganda Research Project a series of studies researching how social media are globally used to manipulate public opinion 39 The study which used interviews and tens of millions posts on seven different social media platforms during scores of elections political crises and national security incidents found that in Russia approximately 45 of Twitter accounts are bots and in Taiwan a campaign against President Tsai Ing wen involved thousands of accounts being heavily coordinated and sharing Chinese propaganda 40 Techniques to like share and post on social networks were used The bot accounts were used to game algorithms to push different content on the platforms Real content put out by real people can be covered up and bots can make online measures of support such as the number of likes or retweets something has received look larger than it should thus tricking users into thinking that specific piece of content is popular a process identified as manufacturing consensus 39 There is also research that cloaked Facebook accounts are behind the creation of spreading political propaganda online to imitate the identity of an opponent so they can spark hateful and aggressive reactions from the media and the opponent 41 The process goes after a case study on a Danish Facebook pages that are cloaking their pages to resemble radical Islamist pages to help provoke racist and anti Muslim reactions as well as negative sentiments towards refugees and immigrants in Denmark 41 The researchers discussed the epistemological methodological and conceptual challenges of online propaganda The information also adds to the reader s understanding of disinformation and propaganda in an increasingly interactive social media environment and contributes to a critical inquiry into social media and subversive politics 41 Music editMusic has always played a major role in popular culture Political ideology is often spread through media however the use of music reaches an extremely wide and varying audience The point of propaganda according to Manzaria and Bruck is to Persuade people s attitude beliefs and behaviors 42 Music of all genres is constantly being used to portray a political view shed light or bring validity to a subject the author or artist feels is worth venturing Propaganda through modes like advertisement and campaign while effective will only reach a small group of the desired recipients A form of music that focuses the most on propaganda is the patriotic and war music from any one country With songs like Slavic Woman s Farewell Over There God Bless the USA Fortunate Son and Jimi Hendrix s cover of the American national anthem these songs are designed to provoke an emotion of either respect and patriotism for your country or rebellion and disgust at your country s actions To quote the Chicago Tribune patriotic songs are designed to make us feel good about our country even when our country does something we believe is wrong 43 According to Putman musical propaganda has a great deal to do with the audience 44 Each musical genre can reach a specific demographic within a few minutes along with the propaganda intertwined Purfleau brings a more social view to the concept of politically motivated music stating that musical propaganda is the basis for a certain kind of political art that aspires to contest the contemporary economic and social order 45 Purfleau s approach to understanding musical propaganda explains the timeless manner by which music has been used to portray viewpoints Though music is not always the first media thought of when contemplating propaganda it is an extremely effective mode and has proved to influence popular culture throughout human history Manufactured consent editEdward S Herman s and Noam Chomsky s book titled Manufacturing Consent 46 tackles this notion as Chomsky uses the analogy of a media machine that divide methods used by media into five different filters including how media works through ownership advertising media elite flack and an agreed upon common enemy The relationship between viewer and broadcaster consumer and producer in the context of media has been explored since the beginning of mass communication This has been carried out not only arguing how the invention of the television changed the make up of households but also how news outlets and the Internet have become powerful tools in pushing propaganda and selected information on consumers Manufactured spaces in media create information bubbles through mechanisms such as algorithmic capitalism They seek to control the ideologies of consumers by bombarding them with information that is leaning to one side whilst depriving them of objectivity Mass media is selective and influential in its content shared to consumers Ownership looks at how people in power and those affected by information brought to the media seek to either destroy it or spin it around to maintain self image and power Media outlets need consumers to attract advertisers These two filters are dependent on the media elite and flack to function due to the fact that the media elite are journalists and other people with access to platforms that are essentially hand picked due to the fact that they play by the rules set by the owners with regards to how and what information is shared Flack on the other hand are those Chomsky proposes to be defamed by those in power or not even given access to a platform simply because their information is too critical or that it threatens ownership advertisers and revenue in general The use of having a common enemy is one most identified in politics and can be described as a scapegoat used to justify decisions made by people in power Hence the basic concept of Herman s and Chomsky s idea is that these filters illustrate how media can be selective about information and why they are motivated to do so With that said the danger behind filtered information is highlighted in the sense that it creates ideological polarization a phenomenon within a society that has dominated both popular and academic debates Sphor 2017 47 A truly simplified example of this phenomenon would be the political system in the United States of America and the self placement between Democrats and Republicans the key word in this context being self placement as society is grouped and divided into two schools of thoughts This black and white fallacy is the backbone to the polarization effect observed in society s thinking Advertising editEmphasis and Repression in Advertising edit Media companies use advertising to advance propaganda Studies have reported that organisations use advertising to promote economic propaganda by influencing how consumers perceive brands Ideally consumers need to have access to all the necessary information that is required to make purchase decisions On the contrary advertisements contain positive and exaggerated information that is intended to convince a consumer to buy a particular product 48 Many adverts are known to include phrases such as 50 percent stronger or Less than 30 percent fat which are highly emphasised These statements mislead consumers who fail to take into account the shortcomings associated with products that are typically repressed in the advert while focusing on exaggerated features 49 Accordingly this strategy amounts to propaganda since companies use it to cause consumers to make irrational decisions by intentional influencing Reference through Name Calling edit Name calling has traditionally existed as a common technique in advertising as it involves making statements that demean and undermine a competitor without necessarily being true 48 Common brand names such as Coca Cola and Pepsi have been known to engage in name calling 50 The two companies often come up with advertisements that undermine the products that the other offers Similarly Burger King ran an ad that featured its sandwich The Whopper being bigger than the box that McDonald s uses in packing its Big Mac hamburger 51 These examples underscore how companies have resorted to using name calling in advertising rather than highlighting how their products would benefit the consumer Consequently these organisations manage to persuade and manipulate consumers into making purchase decisions based on misleading information Bandwagon edit Companies increasingly use the technique in advertising their products and services This method seeks to convince a consumer to make a purchase decision out of the fear of being left out 52 Claiming that millions of consumers are using their products or services and that it would be a mistake not to be part of the trend In 1994 McDonald s featured an advert that claimed that the fast food company had served 99 billion customers since its inception While such a claim may be valid such information is not meant to allow a consumer to make a rational purchase decision 53 Instead these statements are designed to cause people to buy products that they do not necessarily need for the mere reason of not being the one left out Bandwagon propaganda has therefore become a central aspect of modern advertising Glittering Generality edit Another common propaganda technique that is often used in advertising is glittering generality This approach involves using statements that contain phrases that the consumer would immediately consider valuable without further analysis citation needed When used effectively this strategy allows a company to use its adverts in appealing to consumers emotionally rather than helping them to make rational decisions Some of the most common terms that are used in advertising to elicit immediate positive feelings among consumers include better and best 50 An advert may emphasise that the product is the best for the consumer without necessarily indicating the reason why and how the consumer would benefit from making the purchase Since consumers want to acquire the best products and services they choose to buy such items without analysing whether the claims are valid The ability to trigger a positive reaction on the consumer forms the basis of glittering generality in advertising Transfer Propaganda edit Entailing advertisement to projecting positive or negative feelings that a person has regarding a specific idea or person to another 54 The goal of transfer propaganda in advertising is to cause the consumer to associate a product with positive or negative qualities such as patriotism and nationalism in their product evaluation 55 An advert that emphasizes patriotism for instance might be designed to cause consumers to buy a product out of the love that they have for their country Companies take advantage of the fact that people value some things and that they detest others in shaping marketing campaigns Testimonial Advertising edit Advertisements across the world also contain aspects of testimonial propaganda Notably this strategy involves including influential people as well as authority figures and experts in adverts to attract the attention of consumers 54 A toothpaste advert that claims that 99 percent of dentists would recommend the product is an example of how testimonial propaganda occurs in advertising Similarly companies or campaigns are known to use celebrities in endorsing different products through both traditional and modern advertising channels 56 A billboard containing the picture of a famous footballer holding a ball could for instance create the impression that the celebrity prefers the specific brand In such cases companies may persuade and manipulate consumers into believing that their products have been tested and approved by authority figures 52 An understanding of how testimonial advertising affects consumers is therefore helpful in assessing why companies use it See also editBrian Timpone History of propaganda Media bias Media manipulation Political music Propaganda techniquesFurther reading editJacques Ellul Propaganda The Formation of Men s Attitudes Trans Konrad Kellen amp Jean Lerner New York Knopf 1965 New York Random House Vintage 1973 The Techniques of Propaganda Defining Propaganda II Media s Use of Propaganda to Persuade People s Attitude Beliefs and Behaviors Archived 2020 10 06 at the Wayback Machine The Computational Propaganda Project at the Oxford Internet Institute University of OxfordReferences edit learn Mind Over Media propaganda mediaeducationlab com Retrieved 2019 03 10 Hobbes Renee Teaching about Propaganda An Examination of the Historical Roots of Media Literacy PDF Journal of Media Literacy Education 6 57 Snow Nancy 2008 Routledge Handbook of Public Diplomacy p 338 A Propaganda Model by Noam Chomsky Excerpted from Manufacturing Consent chomsky info Retrieved 2017 04 19 Media s Use of Propaganda to Persuade People s Attitude Beliefs and Behaviors web stanford edu Archived from the original on 2020 10 06 Retrieved 2019 03 23 a b c The Story of Propaganda AHA historians org Retrieved 2017 04 19 Rethinking the Boston Massacre AMERICAN HERITAGE americanheritage com Retrieved 2019 02 25 Propaganda as a weapon Influencing international opinion The British Library Retrieved 2017 04 19 Propaganda and War media studies ca Retrieved 2017 04 19 A Brief History of Propaganda 2014 02 20 Retrieved 2017 04 19 Spreading fake news becomes standard practice for governments across the world The Washington Post 2017 07 17 Retrieved 2023 11 07 a b A growing number of governments are spreading disinformation online The Economist 2021 01 13 Retrieved 2023 11 07 Wood Molly Schwab Kristin October 23 2017 How social media brought political propaganda into the 21st century MarketPlace University of Oxford July 20 2018 Social media manipulation rising globally new report warns Phys org a b Seo Hyunjin Ebrahim Husain 2016 12 01 Visual propaganda on Facebook A comparative analysis of Syrian conflicts Media War amp Conflict 9 3 227 251 doi 10 1177 1750635216661648 hdl 1808 27615 ISSN 1750 6352 S2CID 148005288 a b Revealed US spy operation that manipulates social media The Guardian 2011 03 17 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b Army of fake social media friends to promote propaganda Computer World 2011 02 22 Retrieved 2023 11 07 a b c U S Repeals Propaganda Ban Spreads Government Made News to Americans Foreign Policy 2013 07 14 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b H R 5736 To amend the United States Information and Educational Exchange Act of 1948 to authorize the domestic dissemination of information and material about the United States intended primarily for foreign audiences and for other purposes PDF 112th United States Congress 2012 05 10 retrieved 2023 11 06 Americans Finally Have Access to American Propaganda The Atlantic 2013 07 15 Retrieved 2023 11 07 Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban Buzzfeed 2012 05 18 Retrieved 2023 11 07 Facebook Most political trolls are American not Russian The Daily Telegraph 12 October 2018 a b c d Facebook and Twitter Take Down a U S Propaganda Operation Targeting Russia China and Iran Vice News 2022 08 24 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b c Researchers discover sprawling pro U S social media influence campaign NBC News 2022 08 24 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b First major covert pro US propaganda campaign taken down by social media giants EuroNews 2022 09 01 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b Researchers caught a pro US campaign spreading propaganda on social media The Verge 2022 08 25 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b Twitter and Meta take down pro US propaganda campaign BBC 2022 08 26 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b Facebook Twitter and Others Remove Pro U S Influence Campaign The New York Times 2022 08 24 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b Pro American Propaganda on Social Media Had Little Impact Just Like Russian Propaganda on Social Media Reason 2022 09 01 Retrieved 2023 11 07 a b Facebook and Twitter Take Down Pro U S Propaganda Forbes 2022 08 25 Retrieved 2023 11 07 a b Meta claims US military link to online propaganda campaign BBC 2022 11 23 Retrieved 2023 11 08 Twitter deleted Russian troll tweets So we published more than 200 000 of them NBC News Retrieved 2018 09 28 Saudis Image Makers A Troll Army and a Twitter Insider The New York Times 20 October 2018 Twitter aided the Pentagon in its covert online propaganda campaign The Intercept 2022 12 20 Retrieved 2023 11 05 Twitter secretly boosted psyops in Middle East report says Al Jazeera 2022 12 21 a b Malik Shiv Laville Sandra Cresci Elena Gani Aisha 2014 09 24 Isis in duel with Twitter and YouTube to spread extremist propaganda The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2017 04 19 Awan Imran 2017 04 01 Cyber Extremism Isis and the Power of Social Media Society 54 2 138 149 doi 10 1007 s12115 017 0114 0 ISSN 1936 4725 Goldman Russell 2017 03 21 North Korea Flexes Its Military Muscle on YouTube With Added Effects The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2017 04 19 a b Hern Alex 2017 06 19 Facebook and Twitter are being used to manipulate public opinion report the Guardian Retrieved 2018 09 26 Computational Propaganda Worldwide Executive Summary The Computational Propaganda Project Retrieved 2018 11 08 a b c Farkas Johan Schou Jannick Neumayer Christina 2018 05 01 Cloaked Facebook pages Exploring fake Islamist propaganda in social media New Media amp Society 20 5 1850 1867 doi 10 1177 1461444817707759 ISSN 1461 4448 S2CID 21658167 Manzaria Johnie Bruck Jonathon Media s Use of Propaganda to Persuade People s EDGE ethics od development in a global environment Stanford University Archived from the original on 6 October 2020 Retrieved 24 September 2018 Rhein John von 3 July 2010 What makes a song patriotic chicagotribune com Retrieved 2019 02 23 Putman Daniel The Aesthetic Relation of Musical Performance and Audience Oxford Academic British Journal of Aesthetics Retrieved 26 September 2018 Pufleau Luis Reflections on Music and Propaganda Contemporary Aesthetics Michigan Publishing Retrieved 23 September 2018 Chomsky Noam October 2006 Message from Noam Chomsky Lingua 116 10 1469 doi 10 1016 j lingua 2006 06 001 ISSN 0024 3841 Spohr Dominic 2017 08 23 Fake news and ideological polarization Business Information Review 34 3 150 160 doi 10 1177 0266382117722446 ISSN 0266 3821 S2CID 158078019 a b Rabab ah Ghaleb Ahmed Khawaldeh Malak October 2016 Persuasive Appeals in English and Arabic TV Advertisements Implications for EFL Learners and Teachers Dirasat Human and Social Sciences 43 2259 2271 doi 10 12816 0035120 Soules Marshall 2015 Media Persuasion and Propaganda Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 4416 2 JSTOR 10 3366 j ctt1g09zzm a b Koschmann Anthony Sheth Jagdish N 2016 05 05 Do Brands Compete or Coexist Evidence from the Cola Wars Kilts Center for Marketing at Chicago Booth Nielsen Dataset Paper Series Rochester NY doi 10 2139 ssrn 2776376 SSRN 2776376 Handley Lucy 2020 02 20 Burger King s moldy Whopper ad is dividing marketing experts CNBC Retrieved 2020 05 09 a b Asemah Ezekiel S Nwammuo Angela N 2017 07 10 Implications of social judgement theory for persuasive advertising campaigns Journal of Research in National Development 15 1 ISSN 1596 8308 Chomsky Noam Vltchek Andre 2017 On western terrorism from Hiroshima to drone warfare Pluto Presslocation London ISBN 978 1 78680 072 5 OCLC 973225478 a b Silva Leonardo Lopes Evandro Freire Otavio Silva Dirceu 2015 07 01 The Brand s Effect on the Evaluation of Advertising Endorsed by Celebrities an Experimental Study Brazilian Business Review 12 4 57 78 doi 10 15728 bbr 2015 12 4 3 Pedro Caranana Joan Broudy Daniel Klaehn Jeffery eds 25 October 2018 The propaganda model today filtering perception and awareness London University of Westminster Press ISBN 978 1 912656 17 2 OCLC 1062395325 Domazet Ivana S Đokic Ines Milovanov Olja 2017 10 27 The Influence of advertising media on brand awareness Management Journal of Sustainable Business and Management Solutions in Emerging Economies 23 1 13 22 doi 10 7595 management fon 2017 0022 ISSN 2406 0658 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Propaganda through media amp oldid 1192022006 Propaganda on social media, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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