英国的数字中介:对新闻多元化的影响

Damian Tambini, Sharif Labo
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The authors however find that not all news that is filtered through intermediary services is subject to the same shaping and editorial forces, in part, because user agency is also an important factor. The role of intermediaries in news distribution is thus complex; headline numbers do not translate automatically into influence due to the complex interplay and exchange between user agency and the editorial influence of intermediaries.,This paper is based mainly on a secondary analysis of publicly available data on news referrals, and some data provided by news publishers along with re-analysis of regulatory data from Ofcom and previously unpublished data from the BBC and SimilarWeb. These data sources are combined for the first time to investigate claims regarding the current controversy about media plurality, algorithmic power and transparency.,The paper finds that evidence that intermediaries wield concentrated editorial power is mixed. 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引用次数: 13

摘要

谷歌(Google)和Facebook等数字中介机构被视为在线新闻领域的新权力掮客,它们控制着接触消费者的渠道,甚至有可能压制和针对个人发布信息。学者、出版商和政策制定者对这种新权力的影响提出了担忧,从对媒体多元化的影响到对民主话语、言论自由和对舆论形成控制的影响。在回顾了提出这一问题的学术文献和解决这一问题的公共政策之后,本文旨在研究这些主张的实证基础。通过对在线新闻流量引荐的行业数据进行二次分析,作者发现中介机构确实有可能对在线新闻的分发施加重大影响。然而,作者发现,并非所有通过中介服务过滤的新闻都受到相同的塑造和编辑力量的影响,部分原因是用户代理也是一个重要因素。因此,媒介在新闻传播中的作用是复杂的;由于用户代理和中介的编辑影响力之间复杂的相互作用和交换,头条数字不会自动转化为影响力。本文主要基于对新闻引用的公开数据的二次分析,以及新闻出版商提供的一些数据,以及对Ofcom监管数据的重新分析,以及之前未发表的BBC和SimilarWeb数据。这些数据来源首次结合起来,调查有关当前媒体多元化、算法力量和透明度争议的说法。本文发现,中介机构拥有集中编辑权力的证据是混合的。虽然电视和媒体等其他非中介的新闻传播平台仍然非常重要,但网络正朝着成为最重要的传播平台的方向发展,尤其是对年轻人来说。作者发现,搜索和社交等中介机构控制着对很大一部分在线新闻内容的访问。然而,并非所有中介机构的使用都代表着在线把关。用户代理还决定了内容的优先级和消费方式。因此,新闻消费是用户代理和中介影响之间复杂相互作用的产物。与媒体权力及其监管的传统讨论(例如大众媒体多元化的概念)相反;因此,不可能仅仅通过注意中介机构的市场份额来推断影响力。中介机构的角色要微妙得多,也不透明得多。这篇论文主要基于公开的数据。至关重要的是要找出利用这些数据的可能性,因为负责监督和管理媒体多元性的监管机构同样限于这些数据。其影响是,需要采用广泛的方法和数据来源进行进一步的研究,以更新关于媒介多元性和多样性的研究。这些发现的含义是,独立的公共当局应该能够获得更多关于民意形成过程的披露性数据,包括推荐和目前仅由出版商掌握的其他数据。这个三阶段分析框架将对目前正在研究这些问题的监管机构和政策制定者有用。目前,关于数字中介的公民社会和公众辩论在政策辩论中得到了广泛讨论。推动这些辩论将取决于现有的公共政策框架(例如对新闻多样性的限制)是否能够适应新的挑战,例如对新闻分发和舆论形成的中介影响。最近一期《信息》特刊,包括曼塞尔和赫尔伯格的投稿,提出了一系列关于媒介多元化和中介机构的类似问题。这些论文并没有利用所有可用的公开相关数据,从经验上深入研究某一特定媒体市场对媒体多元化和多样性的影响。这篇论文在理论上是原创的,包含了一些以前未发表的数据和一个全新的实证和理论分析。这些模型和表格以前没有发表过。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Digital intermediaries in the UK: implications for news plurality
Digital intermediaries such as Google and Facebook are seen as the new powerbrokers in online news, controlling access to consumers and with the potential even to suppress and target messages to individuals. Academics, publishers and policymakers have raised concerns about the implications of this new power, from the impact on media plurality to implications for democratic discourse, freedom of speech and control over public opinion formation. After reviewing academic literature that has raised this concern and public policy addressing it, this paper aims to examine the empirical foundations for these claims. Through secondary analysis of industry data on referrals of online news traffic, the authors find that intermediaries do have the potential to exert significant influence over distribution of online news. The authors however find that not all news that is filtered through intermediary services is subject to the same shaping and editorial forces, in part, because user agency is also an important factor. The role of intermediaries in news distribution is thus complex; headline numbers do not translate automatically into influence due to the complex interplay and exchange between user agency and the editorial influence of intermediaries.,This paper is based mainly on a secondary analysis of publicly available data on news referrals, and some data provided by news publishers along with re-analysis of regulatory data from Ofcom and previously unpublished data from the BBC and SimilarWeb. These data sources are combined for the first time to investigate claims regarding the current controversy about media plurality, algorithmic power and transparency.,The paper finds that evidence that intermediaries wield concentrated editorial power is mixed. While other, non-intermediated news distribution platforms such as TV and the press remain highly important, online is heading towards being the most important distribution platform, particularly for younger demographics. The authors found that intermediaries such as search and social control access to a significant proportion of online news content. Not all use of intermediaries is indicative of online gatekeeping however. User agency also determines how content is prioritised and thus consumed. The news consumed is therefore a product of a complex interplay between user agency and intermediary influence. In contrast to traditional discussions of media power and its regulation (for example the notion of mass media plurality); it is thus not possible to make inferences on influence simply by noting the market share of intermediaries. The role of intermediaries is much more subtle and opaque.,This paper is mainly based on publicly available data. It is crucial to find out what is possible with such data as regulators with responsibility for monitoring and regulating media plurality are similarly limited to such data. The implications are that further research with a wide range of methods and data sources will be necessary to update research on media plurality and diversity.,The implications of these findings are that independent public authorities should have access to much more revealing data about public opinion formation processes, including referrals and other data currently held only by publishers. The three stage analytical framework will be of use to regulators and policymakers currently looking into these issues.,Civil society and public debate about digital intermediaries is currently intensively discussed in policy debate. Taking these debates forward will depend on whether existing public policy frameworks (such as limits on news plurality) are able to accommodate the new challenges such as intermediary influence on news distribution and public opinion formation.,The recent special issue of INFO, including contributions from Mansell and Helberger, raised a range of similar issues with regard to media plurality and intermediaries. These papers did not seek empirically to examine in depth, using all available publicly relevant data, the implications for media pluralism and diversity in one particular media market. The paper is theoretically original, contains some previously unpublished data and an entirely new empirical and theoretical analysis. The models and tables are previously unpublished.
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