Journal of Online Trust & Safety Publishes Winter 2024 Issue
Journal of Online Trust & Safety Publishes Winter 2024 Issue
The seventh issue features four peer-reviewed articles and four commentaries
Today the Journal of Online Trust and Safety published its seventh issue.
Peer-reviewed articles in this issue include:
- Securing Federated Platforms: Collective Risks and Responses by Yoel Roth, Samantha Lai
- Content Modeling in Multi-Platform Multilingual Social Media Data by Arman Setser, Libby Lange, Kyle Weiss, Vladimir Barash
- Fingerprints of Conspiracy Theories: Identifying Signature Information Sources of a Misleading Narrative and Their Roles in Shaping Message Content and Dissemination by Soojong Kim, Kwanho Kim, Haoning Xue
- Effects of Browsing Conditions and Visual Alert Design on Human Susceptibility to Deepfakes by Emilie L. Josephs, Camilo L. Fosco, Aude Oliva
Commentaries in this issue include:
- Burden of Proof: Lessons Learned for Regulators from the Oversight Board’s Implementation Work by Naomi Shiffman, Carly Miller, Manuel Parra Yagnam, Claudia Flores-Saviaga
- Assuming Good Faith Online by Eric Goldman
- Should Politicians Be Exempt from Fact-Checking? by Sarah Fisher, Beatriz Kira, Kiran Arabaghatta Basavaraj, Jeffrey Howard
- Bridging Theory and Practice: Examining the State of Scholarship Using the History of Trust and Safety Archive by Megan Knittel, Amanda Menking
The Stanford Internet Observatory is hosting the third annual Trust and Safety Research Conference on September 26-27, 2024. Apply to present at the conference by April 30.
The submission deadline for the Conference Proceedings of the Trust and Safety Research Conference is May 1 for peer-reviewed articles and August 1 for commentaries. You can submit directly, or email us a letter of inquiry. You can apply to present at the conference without submitting a paper to the journal.
Questions about the journal can be sent to trustandsafetyjournal@stanford.edu.