posted on 2023-11-29, 18:17authored byFatemeh Tahmasbi, Leonard Schild, Chen Ling, Jeremy Blackburn, Gianluca Stringhini, Yang ZhangYang Zhang, Savvas Zannettou
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has changed our lives in unprecedented ways. In the face of the projected catastrophic consequences, many countries have enacted social distancing measures in an attempt to limit the spread of the virus. Under these conditions, the Web has become an indispensable medium for information acquisition, communication, and entertainment. At the same time, unfortunately, the Web is being exploited for the dissemination of potentially harmful and disturbing content, such as the spread of conspiracy theories and hateful speech towards specific ethnic groups, in particular towards Chinese people since COVID-19 is believed to have originated from China. In this paper, we make a first attempt to study the emergence of Sinophobic behavior on the Web during the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. We collect two large-scale datasets from Twitter and 4chan's Politically Incorrect board (/pol/) over a time period of approximately five months and analyze them to investigate whether there is a rise or important differences with regard to the dissemination of Sinophobic content. We find that COVID-19 indeed drives the rise of Sinophobia on the Web and that the dissemination of Sinophobic content is a cross-platform phenomenon: it exists on fringe Web communities like \dspol, and to a lesser extent on mainstream ones like Twitter. Also, using word embeddings over time, we characterize the evolution and emergence of new Sinophobic slurs on both Twitter and /pol/. Finally, we find interesting differences in the context in which words related to Chinese people are used on the Web before and after the COVID-19 outbreak: on Twitter we observe a shift towards blaming China for the situation, while on /pol/ we find a shift towards using more (and new) Sinophobic slurs.
History
Preferred Citation
Fatemeh Tahmasbi, Leonard Schild, Chen Ling, Jeremy Blackburn, Gianluca Stringhini, Yang Zhang and Savvas Zannettou. ``Go eat a bat, Chang!'': On the Emergence of Sinophobic Behavior on Web Communities in the Face of COVID-19. In: The Web Conference (WWW). 2021.
Primary Research Area
Trustworthy Information Processing
Name of Conference
The Web Conference (WWW)
Legacy Posted Date
2021-08-10
Open Access Type
CC
BibTeX
@inproceedings{cispa_all_3460,
title = "``Go eat a bat, Chang!'': On the Emergence of Sinophobic Behavior on Web Communities in the Face of COVID-19",
author = "Tahmasbi, Fatemeh and Schild, Leonard and Ling, Chen and Blackburn, Jeremy and Stringhini, Gianluca and Zhang, Yang and Zannettou, Savvas",
booktitle="{The Web Conference (WWW)}",
year="2021",
}