cover image: Reducing misinformation sharing at scale using digital accuracy prompt ads

Reducing misinformation sharing at scale using digital accuracy prompt ads

3 Mar 2024

Interventions to reduce misinformation sharing have been a major focus in recent years. Developing “content-neutral” interventions that do not require specific fact-checks or warnings related to individual false claims is particularly important in developing scalable solutions. Here, we provide the first evaluations of a content-neutral intervention to reduce misinformation sharing conducted at scale in the field. Specifically, across two on-platform randomized controlled trials, one on Meta’s Facebook (N=33,043,471) and the other on Twitter (N=75,763), we find that simple messages reminding people to think about accuracy—delivered to large numbers of users using digital advertisements—reduce misinformation sharing, with effect sizes on par with what is typically observed in digital advertising experiments. On Facebook, in the hour after receiving an accuracy prompt ad, we found a 2.6% reduction in the probability of being a misinformation sharer among users who had shared misinformation the week prior to theexperiment. On Twitter, over more than a week of receiving 3 accuracy prompt ads per day, we similarly found a 3.7% to 6.3% decrease in the probability of sharing low-quality content among active users who shared misinformation pre-treatment. These findings suggest that content-neutral interventions that prompt users to consider accuracy have the potential to complement existing content-specific interventions in reducing the spread of misinformation online.
social media misinformation

Authors

Hause Lin, Haritz Garro, Nils Wernerfelt, Jesse Conan Shore, Adam Hughes, Daniel Deisenroth, Nathaniel Barr, Adam J. Berinsky, Dean Eckles, Gordon Pennycook, David Rand

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