Harmful Conspiracies in Temporal Interaction Networks: Understanding the Dynamics of Digital Wildfires through Phase Transitions
Kaspara Skovli G{\aa}sv{\ae}r, Pedro G. Lind, Johannes Langguth,, Morten Hjorth-Jensen, Michael Kreil, Daniel Thilo Schroeder

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the spread of harmful COVID-19 and 5G conspiracy misinformation on Twitter by examining community dynamics and phase transitions in temporal interaction networks, revealing critical points in digital wildfire propagation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework to quantify phases of digital wildfires and identifies phase transitions in misinformation spread through complex temporal network analysis.
Findings
User interactions follow a power-law distribution.
Community sizes exhibit power-law behavior.
Identified critical transition phase in misinformation spread.
Abstract
Shortly after the first COVID-19 cases became apparent in December 2020, rumors spread on social media suggesting a connection between the virus and the 5G radiation emanating from the recently deployed telecommunications network. In the course of the following weeks, this idea gained increasing popularity, and various alleged explanations for how such a connection manifests emerged. Ultimately, after being amplified by prominent conspiracy theorists, a series of arson attacks on telecommunication equipment follows, concluding with the kidnapping of telecommunication technicians in Peru. In this paper, we study the spread of content related to a conspiracy theory with harmful consequences, a so-called digital wildfire. In particular, we investigate the 5G and COVID-19 misinformation event on Twitter before, during, and after its peak in April and May 2020. For this purpose, we examine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMisinformation and Its Impacts · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence
