JORGE FRANGANILLO-UNSPLASH

RESEARCHERS who study misinformation are confronting a new problem: public scorn. And it鈥檚 not just in the form of online trolling. These scientists are losing funding, watching their research centers , and getting with subpoenas.

Given the rapid changes to news, social media, and information sharing, you鈥檇 think there鈥檇 be more support for studying how people learn about the world. Instead, critics are wrongly conflating their work with censorship.

In the , for example, a story hammered a group of psychologists as concocting 鈥渇ake science鈥 to justify censorship. It鈥檚 easy to see why their paper, published last week in , hit a nerve. The researchers found that conservatives shared more information from low-quality news sites on social media than liberals did.

While the idea of news quality sounds subjective and prone to bias, the scientists didn鈥檛 make that judgment themselves. The researchers asked three groups to weigh in: professional fact checkers, a politically mixed group of laypeople, and a group of Republicans. Each group determined what was a high-quality source (a news organization that mostly gets it right, but can sometimes make mistakes) or a low-quality one (a publisher that tends to make things up out of whole cloth). After each group determined what counted as low-quality news, the team looked at who typically shared that type of news. Each time, they found that extreme partisans on both sides were more likely to share this misleading content. And each time, those on the far right contributed more garbage to the information effluent.

The study doesn鈥檛 justify censorship of conservative views, although it does offer an explanation as to why right-wing social media accounts are more likely to be suspended. It shouldn鈥檛 be attacked just because it鈥檚 offending people. That flies in the face of the spirit of free inquiry.

Edward Tenner, a on technology and culture, explained to me that the pushback against the paper could be 鈥 a tendency for people, when told they鈥檙e wrong, to double down. Stirring up antipathy is always going to be an occupational hazard for people who study misinformation, rumors, pseudoscience, and quackery.

Adding to that is the problem that many people don鈥檛 mind lies 鈥 they only abhor lies spread by their political opponents. In a recent article in , Minjae Kim, an assistant professor of management at Jones Graduate School of Business at Rice University, called this acceptance of certain lies 鈥渕oral flexibility.鈥 Citing he collaborated on, he wrote that some supporters of former President Donald Trump recognized that Joe Biden won the 2020 election, but justified Trump鈥檚 claims to the contrary because they believed 鈥渢he political system is illegitimate and stacked against their interests.鈥

And people on the left didn鈥檛 seem upset with President Biden鈥檚 erroneous 2021 claims that people vaccinated against COVID couldn鈥檛 spread the disease to others. That had been the hope, of course, but the Delta variant had already shown that not to be the case. Partisans may have considered Biden鈥檚 statement acceptable, though, reasoning that because the vaccines had the power to save lives, the details didn鈥檛 matter.

Tenner considers the relevance here of the Italian saying, 鈥Se non 猫 vero, 猫 ben trovato鈥 鈥 even if it is not true, it is a good fabrication, or good story. That鈥檚 attributed to 16th century philosopher Giordano Bruno who had some forward-thinking ideas 鈥 and was burned at the stake.

The expression might describe the way JD Vance reacted to Donald Trump鈥檚 statement that immigrants in Ohio were eating cats and dogs. There were no documented incidents of such activity, but Vance attempted justify the rumor by saying that it called attention to problems surrounding immigration.

These kinds of wild stories are the very type social media algorithms tend to amplify with the help of foreign intelligence agencies and . Yet there are ways to moderate the information stream other than taking things down.

鈥淧art of the research that we鈥檙e doing right now is to develop models so that we can evaluate intended and unintended consequence of different moderation schemes,鈥 said Filippo Menczer, a professor of informatics and computer science at Indiana University. But he said these efforts have gotten much harder due to political attacks. Meta and X have also restricted data access to many researchers.

Instead of deleting posts or 鈥渟hadow banning鈥 users who express non-mainstream views, social media companies can fight incorrect or disputed information with additional information. In dynamic areas such as science and medicine, moderation should be because fact-checkers legitimate minority opinion and insightful dissent for misinformation. In some tests, the crowdsourcing-based 鈥渃ommunity notes鈥 feature on X helped .

Picking fights with scientists won鈥檛 make our information problems disappear. A more consistent view for those who are pro-free speech and anti-censorship would be to embrace free inquiry into our information ecosystems 鈥 and to applaud those who scrutinize the algorithms that influence what we think and how we vote.

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