Abstract
During the German general election in 2017, there were coordinated attempts to disturb online public opinion. Disinformation campaigns used different social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter. They managed to infiltrate the online reporting of major German news outlets. Due to the distributed character of disinformation campaigns, these attempts were hardly noticed by the public, and their real dimension has not yet been revealed. We will use data from Facebook about shared URLs in combination with our unique dataset of the political online discourse in Germany, including 700 million tweets and 1.8 million URLs of media content shared by Twitter users, time series of media reports on the German political parties, and political polls to answer two questions: What was the real dimension of a disinformation campaign that was linked (by Twitter) to the Russian Internet Research Agency (IRA)? Is there a measurable effect of the disinformation campaign, either on news reports on the parties or directly on polls? To answer these questions, data access to the Facebook URL Shares dataset is requested to measure the distribution of content from disinformation campaigns across platforms. The starting point of the project is a list of Twitter accounts that Twitter has publicly linked to the IRA.
Principal Investigator

Simon Hegelich
Professor of Political Data Science, Technical University of Munich
Participants

Joana Bayraktar
Student Assistant, Technical University of Munich

Fabienne Marco
Research Assistant, Technical University of Munich

Orestis Papakyriakopoulos
Research Assistant, Technical University of Munich

Juan Carlos Medina Serrano
Research Assistant, Technical University of Munich

Morteza Shahrezaye
Research Assistant, Technical University of Munich