Cornell University researchers found that 42 to 45% of objections in social media news comments are personal attacks rather than reasoned debate. Ph.D candidate Ashley Shea led the team that analyzed thousands of replies on YouTube and Twitter, identifying seven tactics people use to shut down others online. Beyond name-calling, users employed moral corruption appeals like “If you are a veteran then you know you can’t say that,” logical disqualification responses, and content dismissals such as “FAKE NEWS.” About 3% included physical threats, with one stating “Anybody who attempts to ban AR-15s deserves death by the most painful means possible.” The study, published in PLOS One, revealed that 69% of active YouTube users comment on both left-leaning and right-leaning channels, challenging the echo chamber theory and explaining why news comment sections become confrontational battlegrounds. (Story URL)
PHONE TOPIC: What’s the worst thing anybody has ever said to you online?