Elections in 18 separate nations were influenced by online disinformation campaigns last year, suggests research.
Independent watchdog Freedom House looked at how online discourse was influenced by governments, bots and paid opinion formers.
In total, 30 governments were actively engaged in using social media to stifle dissent, said the report.
Educating users to spot fake news and making tech firms police their networks could combat the manipulation, it said.
Devastating impact
The annual report studied the state of internet freedom across 65 nations – covering about 87% of the world’s net-using population.
For the seventh year running, it said, net freedom had declined as governments stepped up efforts to control what citizens said, did and shared online.
The different tactics used to influence online speech included:
- automated bots that echoed official messages
- armies of paid commentators that swamped discussions with pro-government views
- false news sites that spread misleading information
- trolling that soaked up critics’ time with personal attacks
Used alongside more overt technical controls such as firewalls, content filters and blocks on technical tools such as virtual private networks, the manipulation of social media had become a key tool for repressive regimes, it said.
“Not only is this manipulation difficult to detect, it is more difficult to combat than other types of censorship, such as website blocking, because it’s dispersed and because of the sheer number of people and bots deployed to do it,” said Sanja Kelly, head of the Freedom on the Net research project.
Ms Kelly said China and Russia had pioneered widespread net controls but the techniques had now gone “global”.
Many other nations, including Turkey, the Philippines, Syria and Ethiopia, now employed them extensively, she said.
“The effects of these rapidly spreading techniques on democracy and civic activism are potentially devastating,” added Ms Kelly.
Official efforts to control debate were most obvious during elections, said the Freedom House report – which were held in 18 of the countries researchers examined.
Usually the activity was contained within one nation, but increasingly governments were looking to social media to subvert debate beyond their own borders.
Russia, in particular, said the report, had made significant efforts to influence the US presidential election.
It said less than 25% of the world’s net users lived in nations where net access could be considered free, meaning:
- no significant obstacles to getting online
- few restrictions on what could be shared or viewed
- surveillance was limited
- no significant repercussions for those exercising free speech
The report said net freedom could be aided by:
- large-scale programmes that showed people how to spot fake news
- putting tight controls on political adverts
- making social media giants do more to remove bots and tune algorithms to be more objective
–
Source: BBC