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Third-Person Effect and Hate Speech Censorship on Facebook

Lei Guo, Brett G. Johnson

2020Social Media + Society40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

By recruiting 368 US university students, this study adopted an online posttest-only between-subjects experiment to analyze the impact of several types of hate speech on their attitudes toward hate speech censorship. Results showed that students tended to think the influence of hate speech on others was greater than on themselves. Their perception of such messages’ effect on themselves was a significant indicator of supportive attitudes toward hate speech censorship and of their willingness to flag hateful messages.

Topics & Concepts

CensorshipPsychologyPerceptionSocial psychologyFree speechAdvertisingPolitical scienceLawBusinessNeuroscienceHate Speech and Cyberbullying DetectionSocial Media and PoliticsSocial and Intergroup Psychology