Abstract

Online social networks provide a rich substrate for rumor propagation. Information received via friends tends to be trusted, and online social networks allow individuals to transmit information to many friends at once. By referencing known rumors from Snopes.com, a popular website documenting memes and urban legends, we track the propagation of thousands of rumors appearing on Facebook. From this sample we infer the rates at which rumors from different categories and of varying truth value are uploaded and reshared. We find that rumor cascades run deeper in the social network than reshare cascades in general. We then examine the effect of individual reshares receiving a comment containing a link to a Snopes article on the evolution of the cascade. We find that receiving such a comment increases the likelihood that a reshare of a rumor will be deleted. Furthermore, large cascades are able to accumulate hundreds of Snopes comments while continuing to propagate. Finally, using a dataset of rumors copied and pasted from one status update to another, we show that rumors change over time and that different variants tend to dominate different bursts in popularity.

Keywords

RumorPopularityInformation cascadeUploadComputer scienceInternet privacyValue (mathematics)PsychologyWorld Wide WebSocial psychologyPolitical scienceLawMachine learning

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Like like alike

Targeting interest to match a user with services (e.g. news, products, games, advertisements) and predicting friendship to build connections among users are two fundamental task...

2011 366 citations

Publication Info

Year
2014
Type
article
Volume
8
Issue
1
Pages
101-110
Citations
261
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Altmetric
PlumX Metrics

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

261
OpenAlex
24
Influential
262
CrossRef

Cite This

Adrien Friggeri, Lada A. Adamic, Dean Eckles et al. (2014). Rumor Cascades. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media , 8 (1) , 101-110. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v8i1.14559

Identifiers

DOI
10.1609/icwsm.v8i1.14559

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%