Windmills in cyberspace

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to stimulate an urgent dialogue about the impact of automated opinion engines (“bots”) on the functioning of public institutions in democratic societies. While the use of political bots may or may not have influenced the recent US presidential election or the UK...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of business strategy 2017-05, Vol.38 (3), p.48-51
1. Verfasser: Hirsch, Peter Buell
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose The purpose of this paper is to stimulate an urgent dialogue about the impact of automated opinion engines (“bots”) on the functioning of public institutions in democratic societies. While the use of political bots may or may not have influenced the recent US presidential election or the UK “Brexit” referendum, it is believed that the implications of the use of political bots are more broadly troubling. There is an urgent need for common standards to prevent the abuse of these powerful digital tools. Design/methodology/approach The paper is based on a review of recent pieces describing political bots and attempts to extrapolate our learnings from recent political campaigns to the broader context of the discussion of all public issues. Findings It was found that the use of political bots has a powerful ability to manipulate public opinion and could easily infect the totality of public discourse. Research limitations/implications The core data on which the author’s discussion is based are limited to primary research by a small number of data scientists. This pool needs to be significantly expanded. Practical implications The insights the author proposes should serve to stimulate an organized effort to develop common standards for the use of and to prevent the abuse of these automated opinion tools. Social implications Unless an effort along these lines is made, distrust in all democratic and transparent institutions is highly likely to decrease. Originality/value While much has been written about bots in politics, the author believes that this is the first attempt to trace the dangers of bots across a much broader set of community institutions.
ISSN:0275-6668
2052-1197
DOI:10.1108/JBS-02-2017-0023