TY - GEN
T1 - On the origins of memes by means of fringe web communities
AU - Zannettou, Savvas
AU - Cauleld, Tristan
AU - Blackburn, Jeremy
AU - De Cristofaro, Emiliano
AU - Sirivianos, Michael
AU - Stringhini, Gianluca
AU - Suarez-Tangil, Guillermo
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2018 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to ACM.
PY - 2018/10/31
Y1 - 2018/10/31
N2 - Internet memes are increasingly used to sway and manipulate public opinion. This prompts the need to study their propagation, evolution, and influence across the Web. In this paper, we detect and measure the propagation of memes across multiple Web communities, using a processing pipeline based on perceptual hashing and clustering techniques, and a dataset of 160M images from 2.6B posts gathered from Twitter, Reddit, 4chan's Politically Incorrect board (/pol/), and Gab, over the course of 13 months. We group the images posted on fringe Web communities (/pol/, Gab, and The_Donald subreddit) into clusters, annotate them using meme metadata obtained from Know Your Meme, and also map images from mainstream communities (Twitter and Reddit) to the clusters. Our analysis provides an assessment of the popularity and diversity of memes in the context of each community, showing, e.g., that racist memes are extremely common in fringe Web communities. We also find a substantial number of politics-related memes on both mainstream and fringe Web communities, supporting media reports that memes might be used to enhance or harm politicians. Finally, we use Hawkes processes to model the interplay between Web communities and quantify their reciprocal influence, finding that /pol/ substantially influences the meme ecosystem with the number of memes it produces, while The_Donald has a higher success rate in pushing them to other communities.
AB - Internet memes are increasingly used to sway and manipulate public opinion. This prompts the need to study their propagation, evolution, and influence across the Web. In this paper, we detect and measure the propagation of memes across multiple Web communities, using a processing pipeline based on perceptual hashing and clustering techniques, and a dataset of 160M images from 2.6B posts gathered from Twitter, Reddit, 4chan's Politically Incorrect board (/pol/), and Gab, over the course of 13 months. We group the images posted on fringe Web communities (/pol/, Gab, and The_Donald subreddit) into clusters, annotate them using meme metadata obtained from Know Your Meme, and also map images from mainstream communities (Twitter and Reddit) to the clusters. Our analysis provides an assessment of the popularity and diversity of memes in the context of each community, showing, e.g., that racist memes are extremely common in fringe Web communities. We also find a substantial number of politics-related memes on both mainstream and fringe Web communities, supporting media reports that memes might be used to enhance or harm politicians. Finally, we use Hawkes processes to model the interplay between Web communities and quantify their reciprocal influence, finding that /pol/ substantially influences the meme ecosystem with the number of memes it produces, while The_Donald has a higher success rate in pushing them to other communities.
KW - 4chan
KW - Gab
KW - Influence
KW - Memes
KW - Reddit
KW - Twitter
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85058141495
U2 - 10.1145/3278532.3278550
DO - 10.1145/3278532.3278550
M3 - Conference contribution
T3 - Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Conference, IMC
SP - 188
EP - 202
BT - IMC 2018 - Proceedings of the Internet Measurement Conference
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
T2 - 2018 Internet Measurement Conference, IMC 2018
Y2 - 31 October 2018 through 2 November 2018
ER -