Disinformation for hire: A field experiment on unethical jobs in online labor markets

被引:0
作者
Cohn, Alain [1 ]
Stoop, Jan [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Sch Informat, Ann Arbor, MI USA
[2] Erasmus Univ, Rotterdam, Netherlands
关键词
Disinformation; Field experiment; Online labor markets; Unethical work; PREFERENCES; DECEPTION; NEWS;
D O I
10.1016/j.euroecorev.2024.104936
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The spread of misinformation has been linked to increased social divisions and adverse health outcomes, but less is known about the production of disinformation, which is misinformation intended to mislead. In a field experiment on MTurk (N = 1,197), we found that while 70 % of workers accepted a control job, 61 % accepted a disinformation job requiring them to manipulate COVID-19 data. To quantify the trade-off between ethical and financial considerations in job acceptance, we introduced a lower-pay condition offering half the wage of the control job; 51 % of workers accepted this job, suggesting that the ethical compromise in the disinformation task reduced the acceptance rate by about the same amount as a 25 % wage reduction. A survey experiment with a nationally representative sample shows that viewing a disinformation graph from the field experiment negatively affected people's beliefs and behavioral intentions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, including increased vaccine hesitancy. Using a "wisdom-of-crowds" approach, we highlight how online labor markets can introduce features, such as increased worker accountability, to reduce the likelihood of workers engaging in the production of disinformation. Our findings emphasize the importance of addressing the supply side of disinformation in online labor markets to mitigate its harmful societal effects.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Reputation systems and recruitment in online labor markets: insights from an agent-based model
    Lukac, Martin
    Grow, Andre
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2021, 4 (01): : 207 - 229
  • [42] With a Little Help from the Crowd: Receiving Unauthorized Academic Assistance through Online Labor Markets
    Harris, Christopher G.
    Srinivasan, Padmini
    Proceedings of 2012 ASE/IEEE International Conference on Privacy, Security, Risk and Trust and 2012 ASE/IEEE International Conference on Social Computing (SocialCom/PASSAT 2012), 2012, : 904 - 909
  • [43] Discrimination in second-hand consumer markets: evidence from a field experiment
    Bosch, Mariano
    Belen Cobacho, M.
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2012, 19 (17) : 1727 - 1730
  • [44] Price discrimination in informal labor markets in Bogota: an audit experiment during the 2018 FIFA World Cup
    Zamora, Paula
    Mantilla, Cesar
    Blanco, Mariana
    JOURNAL FOR LABOUR MARKET RESEARCH, 2021, 55 (01)
  • [45] Location still matters: Evidence from an online shopping field experiment
    Morgan, John
    Ong, David
    Zhong, Zemin
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION, 2018, 146 : 43 - 54
  • [46] Collaborative learning in online business education: Evidence from a field experiment
    Stanley, Denise
    Zhang, Yi Jenny
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATION FOR BUSINESS, 2020, 95 (08) : 506 - 512
  • [47] One-Way Mirrors in Online Dating: A Randomized Field Experiment
    Bapna, Ravi
    Ramaprasad, Jui
    Shmueli, Galit
    Umyarov, Akhmed
    MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2016, 62 (11) : 3100 - 3122
  • [48] Preference effects on friendship choice: Evidence from an online field experiment
    Yu, Siyu
    Xie, Yu
    SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH, 2017, 66 : 201 - 210
  • [50] Age discrimination in hiring decisions: Evidence from a field experiment in the labor market
    Carlsson, Magnus
    Eriksson, Stefan
    LABOUR ECONOMICS, 2019, 59 : 173 - 183