February 6, 2023

"The highest-profile scholar of misinformation is being forced out at Harvard’s premier public policy school..."

"... and interviews and internal documents reviewed by Semafor illustrate the institution’s discomfort with her high-profile and politically charged work. Joan Donovan, Research Director of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, is a defining and combative voice in the study of how false information travels on the internet. She became a prominent commentator after the 2016 election of Donald Trump, when many Democrats blamed misinformation on social media for his election. Her departure is tangled up in the arguments over whether misinformation is an academic pursuit or a partisan one, and it played out inside a cautious, American institution trying to hold a shrinking political center."


That's the beginning of the article, and my first question — after I absorbed the idea that "misinformation"  is a field of scholarly study — was which way does this "politically charged work" lean? Too left? Too right? Too in-between? 

How far must I read to get to an answer? Without an answer, I feel misinformed by this article about misinformation.

There's some Facebook-related intrigue: one of Donovan's challengers was once the head of policy at Facebook, Sheryl Sandberg has given millions to the Kennedy School, and Donovan has some "involvement" with an archive of documents leaked by a Facebook whistle-blower. The Facebook policy, we're told, is not to act as an arbiter of truth.

We're also told of an incident in which Donovan "took heat from the political left." I think that suggests that she herself is on the left. 
In January of 2021, a Shorenstein Center journal, Misinformation Review, whose editorial board includes Donovan, published a paper led by another researcher, Mutale Nkonde. The paper accused a group called American Descendants of Slavery of engaging in what it called "disinformation creep."
The paper relied on research from the progressive group MoveOn, and provoked heated denials from its subjects. In December of 2021, the journal retracted the study, finding that it “failed to meet professional standards of validity and reliability,” and that its conclusions were based on “a few selected tweets.”

Misinformation Review’s editors said the retraction was in response to complaints from ADOS, which last summer filed a defamation lawsuit against the Kennedy School and the author. Nkonde’s allies blamed Donovan, who does not oversee the journal.

Does not oversee the journal but is on the editorial board? 

In a letter to Donovan last October, Jessie Daniels, a professor at Hunter College, accused Donovan of engaging in a “nefarious whisper campaign” against Nkonde, and letting down the fight against “white supremacy” in favor of “maintaining the (white) status quo.” Daniels demanded Donovan apologize and tell funders that she was “mistaken,” and continued: “If, however, you’re not able to take this in, then what will happen next is not going to be pleasant for you.”...

So the alleged misinformation is itself, allegedly misinformation. How can you do this kind of study without attracting a strong defense from those you accuse — especially if you are accusing from a perch at Harvard? 

I don't think the Semafor article ever answered my question whether Donovan leaned left or right. I do see that she seems to have offended 2 entities — Facebook and American Descendants of Slavery. I looked up American Descendants of Slavery in Wikipedia and see this presentation of the controversy:
In a 2020 article in Misinformation Review... a group of authors, including academics and journalists, some affiliated with the Democratic Party-linked activist group MoveOn, analyzed postings with the #ADOS hashtag on Twitter in the runup to that year's elections, where ADOS had urged voters not to cast a presidential vote for any Democrat unless the party formally endorsed reparations. The authors concluded that ADOS was a disinformation operation that served the interests of the political right by discouraging Blacks from voting....

So it seems that "Misinformation Review" was serving the interests of the Democratic Party. Is this why the Semafor article feels so obscure? It's hard to say whether it's left or right wing to criticize a group that seems to be on the left for helping the political party on the right.

I wish Semafor would work harder at speaking clearly about this problem! It's important to look at the way black people are expected to vote for Democrats. Here, it seems, ADOS was making strong demands and trying to exert real pressure on Democrats. How is that "misinformation"? It's just a political technique that hurts Democrats.

ADDED: Back in November 2021, Ben Smith himself wrote a NYT article that featured Donovan, "Inside the ‘Misinformation’ Wars/Journalists and academics are developing a new language for truth. The results are not always clearer."

Shorenstein’s research director, Joan Donovan.... strongly objected to my suggestion that the term ["misinformation"] lacks a precise meaning. She added that, appearances aside, she doesn’t believe the word is merely a left-wing label for things that Democrats don’t like.

Ha ha. Was it part of Smith's "suggestion" that "misinformation" is "merely a left-wing label for things that Democrats don’t like" or did Donovan come up with the scathing suggestion herself just so she could deny it? I think Smith said it and Smith thinks it — correctly! — so why doesn't he own it? At least in 2021, when writing for the NYT, he spelled it out — "merely a left-wing label for things that Democrats don’t like." Now, on his own new project Semafor, he's much more obtuse. Is that because he's pitching Semafor at a higher-education level? Or is it because he wants to serve the interests of Democrats?

The 2021 piece continues:

Instead, she traces the modern practice of “disinformation” (that is, deliberate misinformation) to the anti-corporate activists the Yes Men, famous for hoaxed corporate announcements and other stunts, and the “culture jamming” of Adbusters. But their tools, she wrote, have been adopted by “foreign operatives, partisan pundits, white supremacists, violent misogynists, grifters and scammers.”...

That's a cagey answer. She's tracing the origin of the term and the "modern practice," and that may not seem to be all about helping the Democratic Party, but the question should be about what was going on with the research she directs. Is that about looking for things Democrats don't like? 

55 comments:

MadTownGuy said...

"I wish Semafor would work harder at speaking clearly about this problem!"


Don't hold your breath waiting.

tcrosse said...

Isn't Misinformation just another word for Heresy?

Temujin said...

Ben Smith = Misinformation.

As for a professional education system offering misinformation as a field of study, why not? Given the other areas that are now considered 'fields of study' that include Taylor Swift and unicorns, I think offering misinformation as a recognized and serious field of study is perfect.

So is this example of the left eating it's own.

PS- As for unicorn studies, no I do not have a specific university curriculum to point out. But that's only because I haven't looked. If you task me with doing that, I'm sure I could find it out there.

rehajm said...

Ann figures it out by the middle of the post but I'm fatigued by the daily recurrence of the feelings of amusement and dread when others believe our institutions still have any recognizable form of integrity. It's easy to recognize these types of inbred leftie battles if you accept our institutions are politically corrupt beyond repair and one of their top priorities is the obsession with coordinating what information the unwashed are allowed to see...

Enigma said...

A generation ago both academic and government circles were dominated by soft center-left politics. They had plenty of radical (nonsensical, quasi-religious) lefties around, but stayed focused on facts and data, and didn't let the crazies speak in public and didn't give them power. This was textbook lip service to the hard left---see the nickname "Mad Maxine Waters."

A 1-2-3 punch gave the loony left control: (1) Trump's humiliation of the center left and their conventional wisdom (i.e., the Hillary clique) in the 2016 election, (2) Trump's rudeness and undoing of all things Politically Correct immediately (e.g., Trump calling Maxine Waters "a very low IQ individual) -- this broke many left-wing taboos in just 5 words, and (3) the fuzzy anxiety, fear, corruption, and bullying of the COVID-19 era.

So, the net result was that the left gave their internal loonies everything they wanted and dropped their historically pragmatic moderate conventional wisdom.

The ideological sins of the left after WW2 included (1) censoring discussion of eugenics and biology after the horrors of Hitler, (2) censoring the sins of global Communism because they wanted it to be true even thought is was bad, (3) ejecting all objective and right-leaning critics from academia along with ROTC programs in retaliation for Lyndon Johnson and Nixon and Vietnam, and (4) systematically shutting down all sincere debate about CO2 / global warming / climate change. With this the left lost the ability to distinguish between information and misinformation and set themselves up for disaster in 2016. They became blind ideologues and the founders of the primitive Green-Woke Religion. The hard left now echoes the wishful-thinking, iconography-over-substance dictators of the 20th century.

They made their own bed and now we all must lay in it. "Superior" progressive views aren't superior when they actually reflect dogma and tradition. Progressives regressed to the mean and are now more conservative than many easygoing libertarians who vote for Republicans today. We'll all be dead if the loony prog-lefties let a crazy into power who again seeks a final solution.

rehajm said...

It's been a while but isn't Harvard's Public Policy school across the river in Allston and isn't that were the leftie celebs go to kill their careers?

Jaq said...

You are trying to sort snowflakes in a blizzard. We have seen that all of the quality glossies and big city newspapers have been suborned by the security state, so those seeking true information are doomed to fail.

Mother Jones just wrote a piece claiming that those who criticized the #Hamilton68 project, like the Columbia Journalism Review, got it all wrong, that they didn't understand the purpose of all of the lying, and that pointing out that RussiaGate was all political disinformation *only helped Trump*. You see, if it hurts Trump, it's not "disinformation."

https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2023/02/columbia-journalism-review-jeff-gerth-trump-russia-the-media/

Meanwhile it looks like our own Department of Defense engaged in disinformation, by claiming anonymously that there were three balloon incursions under Trump. Former Trump officials claim that this is a lie and want a Congressional investigation, after all, if it really did happen, the people who kept it from the Commander in Chief should be court-martialed.



James K said...

According to this Daily Mail story:

Dr Joan Donavan has consistently championed Democrats through her role as a 'misinformation' expert

though their only detailed example is that she was dismissive of the Hunter Biden laptop story.

Patrick Henry was right! said...

That is what "disinformation"is. It's truthful information that harms the Democrat Party and/or the Deep State. And you, our Hostess, vote for this crap, each and every time.

Gusty Winds said...

The two words "misinformation" and "disinformation" invented to push left wing propaganda after the 2016 election, and brainwash every Hillary voter a future Biden voter are themselves misinformation and disinformation. The credentialed sold what was left of their souls because the working class elected and outsider.

In November Harvard released a study recommending we all stop saying "How are you?" when greeting someone or making small talk.

This is now what passes for elite institutional studies in the United States. Harvard is almost as full of shit as the University of Wisconsin. Neck and neck.

What a waste of time and money.

Gusty Winds said...

It's my favorite line:

Remember folks, the Wizard didn't give the Scarecrow a brain. He gave him a college diploma.

These people are ridiculous.

Bruce Hayden said...

It’s the left eating it’s own. “Misinformation” inevitably means left wing propaganda, and someone in charge of it then, by necessity, must be a leftist stalwart. Usually hard left.

How do we know this? Because, if nothing else, of the recent Twitter Files. People liken these all had their own Twitter contacts whom they could, and did often, reach out to, to silence dissenting views as “misinformation”. And then, one day, all of those calls went unanswered, after Musk fired the censors at the other end of those calls en mass.

rhhardin said...

Move it into STEM fields by proposing that, if information has entropy, misinformation ought to have temperature. That way they're conjugates, whose product is energy.

Ann Althouse said...

"Don't hold your breath waiting."

I'm not waiting. I'm criticizing them publicly. I have reason to believe this critique will be seen.

Ann Althouse said...

And it's not that I expect them to follow my instruction. It's enough that they are criticized publicly. Enough for me. My work is done. I'm not waiting for anything. I am moving on to the next thing. Let the chips fall where they may.

Butkus51 said...

Well then, who IS Ray Epps?

Wince said...

rehajm said...
It's been a while but isn't Harvard's Public Policy school across the river in Allston and isn't that were the leftie celebs go to kill their careers?

The Kennedy School is in Cambridge on the edge of Harvard Square before the bridge to Allston. The Business School is in Allston.

tommyesq said...

it played out inside a cautious, American institution trying to hold a shrinking political center.

Yes, we all know that Harvard is cautiously trying to hold a shrinking political center and not a bunch of crazy leftists. Oh wait, in a survey, Harvard faculty self-identified as 37.5% very liberal, 45% liberal, 16.1% moderate, and only 1.5% conservative (and 0.0% very conservative).

Jamie said...

The two words "misinformation" and "disinformation" invented to push left wing propaganda

... and once they existed in the American lexicon, they could be turned into a "field of study" and there could be "scholars" of them.

Jargon - every "discipline" has to have it, a set of shibboleths to suss out the unworthy. And the spies.

Bob Boyd said...

Sounds like Donovan broke the 'No enemies to the left' rule.

Rusty said...

(sniff) Love you, Ann.
(Meade. You lucky bastard.)

rehajm said...

I have reason to believe this critique will be seen.

What reason might that be?

narciso said...

So a sbf funded publication whose editor put out unverifiable gossip says what about dezinforma

NKP said...

"Misinformation" more plainly stated, is a lie. It promotes misunderstanding that leads to mistakes. The only defense is relentless and skeptical examination of fact.

MadisonMan said...

Can I just say that Misinformation Review is a delightful name for a Journal? I don't know if it's a respectable Journal though.
"I do peer review for Misinformation Review" sounds like part of an old-time SNL skit.

robother said...

As Althouse observes, the action of ADOS is in no way misinformation; it is simply a Democrat interest group trying to force a policy position on the Democrat Party by means that would be inconvenient to the Party's 2020 election strategy. The "scholar" is being sacked for being so obtuse that she exposed purely political nature of "misinformation," as well as the subservient position of Blacks within the Democrat Party ("shut up and vote").

Bob Boyd said...

Instructions from the manual could not have been more plain.
Don't ignore the territorial piss posts.

Sebastian said...

"inside a cautious, American institution trying to hold a shrinking political center."

Now that's funny. Also useful as an indicator of life inside the prog bubble: Harvard is the "center" of the left. Cautious! Note the assumption that an academic institution has a political identity and is trying to play a political role. Wasn't that a deplorable talking point?

"It's hard to say whether it's left or right wing to criticize a group that seems to be on the left for helping the political party on the right."

Mostly left wing, though. Power ueber allies. Does the "right wing" even pay attention to the likes of ADOS? Of course, reparations is a non-starter on the right, but we are cynical enough to welcome temporary anti-Dem lefty insanity. Not sure the article was quite worth the fisking, but it does hint, "obscurely," at prog infighting.

"How is that "misinformation"? It's just a political technique that hurts Democrats."

You may have meant to imply this, but -- any technique that hurts Dems is ipso facto misinformation. Misinformation is a prog trope and tool.

Dave Begley said...

Ann Althouse is a real influencer. When she praised the iPhone 14 and its camera, it made me think I need to buy one.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

"when many Democrats blamed misinformation on social media for Trump's win"

Code for - Democrats are unable to accept defeat. the voter was mis-infomred!

Owen said...

Madison Man @ 8:34: “… Can I just say that Misinformation Review is a delightful name for a Journal?…”. Agree! It reminds me a little of The Journal of Irreproducible Results, which (IIRC) annually hosts the Ig Nobel prize ceremony to recognize the worst “science” done in the previous year.

Jamie said...

16.1% moderate

Any bets on how moderate these moderates of the Harvard faculty actually are? Reminds me of the exchange in Crazy Rich Asians: "We're... comfortable." "That's something really rich people say!"

"I'm... moderate." Does that really mean they support, for example, European-style abortion laws? Voter ID? Standing for the National Anthem? The things the vast middle of America supports? Maybe, but I am skeptical.

wildswan said...

All those studied by the field of misinformation studies are liars.
But some lies are more equal to the truth than others because they help the Democrats.
And some lies are more equal to a lie because they help the wrong Democrats.
Therefore this woman wrongly lied about a lie and is a cretin.

Jaq said...

Imagine if ADOS supporters had done to Pelosi what the Freedom Caucus did to McCarthy.

Joe Smith said...

'We're also told of an incident in which Donovan "took heat from the political left." I think that suggests that she herself is on the left. '

She works for fucking Harvard...of course she is a lefty.

This is not difficult.

Yancey Ward said...

"I wish Semafor would work harder at speaking clearly about this problem! It's important to look at the way black people are expected to vote for Democrats. Here, it seems, ADOS was making strong demands and trying to exert real pressure on Democrats. How is that "misinformation"? It's just a political technique that hurts Democrats."

The purpose was never to speak to clearly- the entire purpose is another bit of disinformation.

Original Mike said...

"The authors concluded that ADOS was a disinformation operation that served the interests of the political right by discouraging Blacks from voting...."

Do the people in this row really think a single solitary person is going to refrain from voting because of what is or is not published in some Harvard journal? What's the intersection between misinformation and delusion?

Greg the Class Traitor said...

She became a prominent commentator after the 2016 election of Donald Trump, when many Democrats blamed misinformation on social media for his election.

Which claim was itself the biggest disinformation and misinformation of the 2016 election cycle.

It's like the "honesty researcher" being caught making up his "data", the "misinformation experts" being justified on the basis of complete misinformation

baghdadbob said...

Semafor's Ben Smith came from BuzzFeed, notable for publishing the Steele Dossier misinformation. Semafor's early investors include notorious lefty SFB, of FTX ponzi fame.

I'm glad we have such guardians of information filtering.

BIII Zhang said...

Good lord that photograph.

Lesbian haircut. Check

Unwashed hair. Check

Morbid obesity. Check

I can guarantee you this, Harvard ain't forcing this broad out without a forklift.

Owen said...

Baghdad Bob @ 10:06: “…ponzi fame…”. That seems to be a useful metaphor. What is at issue here is the quality of information, where different people are contending for supremacy as truth-tellers (and thus the power to criticize and dismiss others claiming to be such). And in this arena of shifting sand and self-arrogation, what is really going on is the Ponzification of our trust in any claim of truth and stable verity. We were sold a parcel of bullshit and now, when we go to cash it in, we find it is utterly worthless.

Kathryn51 said...

baghdadbob said...
Semafor's Ben Smith came from BuzzFeed, notable for publishing the Steele Dossier misinformation. Semafor's early investors include notorious lefty SFB, of FTX ponzi fame.

Smith didn't merely come from BuzzFeed - he was the editor that made the decision to publishe the Steele Dossier - perhaps the No. 1 reason why the public doesn't trust media.

More from Wikipedia:

In a memo that Justin Smith sent to "close confidants", he described a new company that would "reimagine quality global journalism" aimed at what he said was an "English-speaking, college-educated, professional class" that had "lost trust in all sources of news and information".

Semafor would be nothing but for SBF's investment and Smith should, of course, return the $$ - but instead he just hired more "reporters" from blue chip WaPo and NYT - the ultimate purveyors of misinformation.

Critter said...

Disinformation is the Left's new Tower of Babel.

n.n said...

A politically charged wonk, but with progressive congruence. A baby, even, a dirty residue. Abort, cannibalize, sequester her carbon.

Michael K said...

The whole "disinformation/misinformation" thing was just Democrats trying to explain the Trump phenomenon. They could not accept that millions of voters rejected the typical politicians of both parties. The communists, which the Democrat Party resembles more each week, called this "false consciousness." More colloquially, it is "Who you gonna believe, me or your lying eyes?"

This just more of the left eating its own.

Hassayamper said...

"inside a cautious, American institution trying to hold a shrinking political center."

This statement gives me more reliable information about the authors than it does about the subject of their article.

Jupiter said...

"... after I absorbed the idea that "misinformation" is a field of scholarly study ..."

That looks like a two-way street.

mccullough said...

Harvard & The NY Times.

Two Elite Institutions of Disinformation & Misinformation

The Best & The Brightest

Quaestor said...

Althouse writes, "How far must I read to get to an answer? Without an answer, I feel misinformed by this article about misinformation."

How far? Past the bottom of the page. Beyond the gap between the medium and the floor. To the stenciling on the underside of the parquet ought to do it.

"Owens Flooring." Ah, unadulterated information at last.

KellyM said...

Building on what Michael K said above, it's a feeble and not entirely effective attempt at regaining the chokehold on information that these outlets enjoyed for so long. God forbid people actually pay attention and seek out answers from alternate sources. Can't have that!

By calling anything deemed unapproved "disinformation/misinformation" it gets dismissed by a good portion of the sheeple American public, if they even hear or see it, and those who reject the gatekeeping (from both sides, since it's Uniparty anyway) are labeled conspiracy theorists and considered crackpots.

Perfect example: the clown-levels of screeching surrounding any attempt at getting real and honest info on the use of Ivermectin and HCQ in managing COVID. Not to mention the total blacklisting of completely safe and affordable vitamin supplements (D3, Zinc, Quercetin, Liposomal Vitamin C, etc.) as part of the regimen.

ccscientist said...

The whole problem with "misinformation" is that someone somewhere decides that something is "mis" and we have to take their word for it. Hunter's laptop was "mis" and then it wasn't. Anything contrary to Fauci (if you could even figure out what he was saying) was "mis" and then later turned out to not necessarily be "mis". In big contrast, 50 years ago government would put out an official party line such as the food pyramid, or red meat will kill you, or drink 8 glasses of water a day etc. but you were in no professional danger if you made jokes about it or ignored it. Now you can get arrested for surfing, by yourself, in the ocean, without a mask during covid. You can be banned from social media for suggesting that maybe sex changes for minors is less than angelic. You can go to jail for merely being at the J6 protest (not even going into the capitol). The enforcement of orthodoxy has been implemented. And yet so often the orthodoxy turns out to be bullshit or self-serving or contradictory.

Earnest Prole said...

So the alleged misinformation is itself, allegedly misinformation

This should be the default assumption when you hear the word.

gpm said...

>>The Kennedy School is in Cambridge on the edge of Harvard Square before the bridge to Allston.

Where the T's "cah bahns" used to be, back when the Red Line ended at Harvard Square. Maybe a better use of the grounds.

--gpm

Big Mike said...

I would like to remind everyone that the Iowa caucuses are still a full year away, assuming that the Republicans do not allow the Democrats to dictate their primary season. A lot can happen in a year.

So far attention on the Republican side is being primarily paid to Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis. However today I received a piece of campaign literature from Rand Paul (disguised as a different type of communication, but obvious if you know what to look for). So it's not necessarily at two-person race. What I like about Rand Paul, and Ron DeSantis for that matter, is their defiance of bureaucrat and fake scientist Tony Fauci. Turns out that they're right and Fauci was wrong. No surprise to me.

Kirk Parker said...

Sebastian,

"Power ueber allies"

Don't know if The bolded word is a typo, but if so it's a splendid one. Otherwise, well done!