Army Research Office's bankrolling of 'emotional contagion' study scrubbed from Cornell press release
Was there a cover-up surrounding the Pentagon’s
direct funding of Facebook’s notorious mass psychological study in order
to conceal the fact that the experiment’s true purpose was part of
preparations to manipulate public opinion in times of civil unrest?
It now appears as though information indicating that the
Department of Defense bankrolled the experiment was scrubbed from an
online press release by Cornell University in order to hide the
connection.
Here’s what we know for a fact to be true. Facebook’s mass psychological study,
which proved that altering a user’s timeline feed was a successful
method of causing emotional “contagion” to spread through the social
network, was conducted in part by Cornell University’s Jeffrey T.
Hancock, who was listed as one of the study’s authors.
Hancock is also involved with the Pentagon’s Minerva Initiative, which recently hit the headlines
for its role in bankrolling a program which provides “funding to
universities to model the dynamics, risks and tipping points for
large-scale civil unrest across the world.”
However, an even more creepy connection between the
Facebook experiment and the Pentagon has emerged after it was revealed
that the original press release from Cornell highlighting the study
included a passage at the bottom which read, “The study was funded in part by the James S. McDonnell Foundation and the Army Research Office.”
According to the Army Research Office’s official website,
“Basic research proposals from educational institutions, nonprofit
organizations, and private industry are competitively selected and
funded,” as part of the Pentagon’s mission of “combating terrorism and
new emerging threats.”
However, the text indicating the Facebook study was
bankrolled by the Pentagon was later scrubbed from the website, with
Cornell claiming it had made a mistake, an explanation that Jay Rosen,
Journalism Professor at NYU, finds highly dubious.
“Why do I call this strange? Any time my work has been featured in an NYU press release, the PR officers involved show me drafts and coordinate closely with me, for the simple reason that they don’t want to mischaracterize scholarly work,” writes Rosen.“So now we have to believe that Cornell’s Professor of Communication and Information Science, Jeffrey Hancock, wasn’t shown or didn’t read the press release in which he is quoted about the study’s results (weird) or he did read it but somehow failed to notice that it said his study was funded by the Army when it actually wasn’t (weirder).”“I think I would notice if my university was falsely telling the world that my research was partially funded by the Pentagon… but, hey, maybe there’s an innocent and boring explanation that I am overlooking.”
The Pentagon’s involvement with a Facebook study which
would have given the DoD a revealing insight into how to manipulate
public dissatisfaction via social media during potential civil unrest
would not be a surprising move given the Army’s obsession with
anticipating domestic disorder.
As we previously highlighted,
a 2008 study by the U.S. Army War College’s Strategic Institute warned
that the United States may experience massive civil unrest in the wake
of a series of crises which it has termed “strategic shock.” The recent
Minerva Initiative project to predict disorder and its link to Facebook
researcher Jeffrey T. Hancock is also a tantalizing connection.
“So it seems that Facebook and the U.S. military are
likely working together to study civil unrest and work on ways to
manipulate the masses into apathy or misguided feelings of contentment
in the face of continued banker and oligarch theft. This is extremely
disturbing, but this whole affair is highly troubling in spite of this,”
writes Michael Krieger.
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