IRCYDec 2, 2021

Where the Earth is flat and 9/11 is an inside job: A comparative algorithm audit of conspiratorial information in web search results

arXiv:2112.01278v231 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of search engines potentially amplifying conspiracy theories for the public, which is an incremental investigation into a known issue of online information bias.

The study conducted a comparative algorithm audit of five search engines to examine the distribution of conspiratorial information in search results, finding that all except Google consistently displayed conspiracy-promoting content in top results, with variations across queries.

Web search engines are important online information intermediaries that are frequently used and highly trusted by the public despite multiple evidence of their outputs being subjected to inaccuracies and biases. One form of such inaccuracy, which so far received little scholarly attention, is the presence of conspiratorial information, namely pages promoting conspiracy theories. We address this gap by conducting a comparative algorithm audit to examine the distribution of conspiratorial information in search results across five search engines: Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo and Yandex. Using a virtual agent-based infrastructure, we systematically collect search outputs for six conspiracy theory-related queries (flat earth, new world order, qanon, 9/11, illuminati, george soros) across three locations (two in the US and one in the UK) and two observation periods (March and May 2021). We find that all search engines except Google consistently displayed conspiracy-promoting results and returned links to conspiracy-dedicated websites in their top results, although the share of such content varied across queries. Most conspiracy-promoting results came from social media and conspiracy-dedicated websites while conspiracy-debunking information was shared by scientific websites and, to a lesser extent, legacy media. The fact that these observations are consistent across different locations and time periods highlight the possibility of some search engines systematically prioritizing conspiracy-promoting content and, thus, amplifying their distribution in the online environments.

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