Story at a glance
- The spread of disinformation online is a growing threat to the public health campaign to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19.
- Lawmakers are putting pressure on major social media companies to take responsibility for information shared on their platforms.
- A new report finds that some of the same far-right extremists behind election disinformation are now pivoting to vaccine disinformation.
Far-right extremists behind election disinformation are now pivoting to spreading alarmist warnings and misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines, according to a New York Times investigation.
“They rode the shift in the national conversation away from Trump to what was happening with the massive ramp up in vaccines,” Devin Burghart, the head of the Seattle-based Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights, told the New York Times, referring to followers of QAnon. “It allowed them to pivot away from the failure of their previous prophecy to focus on something else.”
BREAKING NEWS ON THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
PFIZER IS NOW TESTING A COVID-19 PILL
1 IN 4 AMERICANS REFUSE TO GET COVID-19 VACCINE: POLL
ALASKA BECOMES FIRST STATE TO OPEN VACCINES TO ADULTS OF ANY AGE
Public health officials have been warning about the dangers of vaccine misinformation as the country seeks to inoculate enough Americans to reach herd immunity. Just this week the CEOs of Facebook, Google and Twitter were questioned before Congress on their responsibility to combat disinformation spread on their platforms as well as their role in the organization of the insurrection on the United States Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Ahead of the hearing, a group of 12 state attorneys general sent a letter to Facebook and Twitter calling for “immediate steps to fully enforce your companies’ guidelines against vaccine misinformation.”
A recent report from the Center for Countering Digital Hate and Anti-Vax Watch found that most of the anti-vaccine content circulating online can be tied to 12 people, several of whom are figures in the health and wellness spheres. But The New York Times investigation found that far-right groups are increasingly joining the anti-vaccination movement, fueled by a mistrust in the government.
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“If the so-called Stop the Steal movement appeared to be chasing a lost cause once President Joe Biden was inaugurated, its supporters among extremist organizations are now adopting a new agenda from the anti-vaccination campaign to try to undermine the government,” The New York Times reported.
It’s not clear how large the overlap is between far-right groups and the anti-vaccine movement, which began even before COVID-19 vaccines had been developed and grew online amid mixed messages from officials. But as the insurrection revealed, online activity can quickly be organized into offline action.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT CORONAVIRUS RIGHT NOW
BLACK PEOPLE IN THE US ARE GETTING VACCINATED AT LOWER RATES
DATA SHOWS BLACK AMERICANS ARE PUNISHED MORE HARSHLY FOR COVID-19 VIOLATIONS
HOW THE CORONAVIRUS IS THREATENING THE 2020 CENSUS
NYPD CREATES TASK FORCE TO INVESTIGATE ATTACKS ON ASIAN AMERICANS
WHY OUTBREAKS LIKE CORONAVIRUS DRIVE XENOPHOBIA AND RACISM — AND WHAT WE CAN DO ABOUT IT
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