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Auteurs principaux: Höldrich, Elisabeth, Angermaier, Mathias, Lasser, Jana, Pinheiro-Neto, Joao
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2025
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.13398
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author Höldrich, Elisabeth
Angermaier, Mathias
Lasser, Jana
Pinheiro-Neto, Joao
author_facet Höldrich, Elisabeth
Angermaier, Mathias
Lasser, Jana
Pinheiro-Neto, Joao
contents Conspiracy theories have long drawn public attention, but their explosive growth on platforms like Telegram during the COVID-19 pandemic raises pressing questions about their impact on societal trust, democracy, and public health. We provide a geographical, temporal and network analysis of the structure of of conspiracy-related German-language Telegram chats in a novel large-scale data set. We examine how information flows between regional user groups and influential broadcasting channels, revealing the interplay between decentralized discussions and content spread driven by a small number of key actors. Our findings reveal that conspiracy-related activity spikes during major COVID-19-related events, correlating with societal stressors and mirroring prior research on how crises amplify conspiratorial beliefs. By analysing the interplay between regional, national and transnational chats, we uncover how information flows from larger national or transnational discourse to localised, community-driven discussions. Furthermore, we find that the top 10% of chats account for 94% of all forwarded content, portraying the large influence of a few actors in disseminating information. However, these chats operate independently, with minimal interconnection between each other, primarily forwarding messages to low-traffic groups. Notably, 43% of links shared in the data set point to untrustworthy sources as identified by NewsGuard, a proportion far exceeding their share on other platforms and in other discourse contexts, underscoring the role of conspiracy-related discussions on Telegram as vector for the spread of misinformation.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Characterizing the Dynamics of Conspiracy Related German Telegram Conversations during COVID-19
Höldrich, Elisabeth
Angermaier, Mathias
Lasser, Jana
Pinheiro-Neto, Joao
Social and Information Networks
Physics and Society
Conspiracy theories have long drawn public attention, but their explosive growth on platforms like Telegram during the COVID-19 pandemic raises pressing questions about their impact on societal trust, democracy, and public health. We provide a geographical, temporal and network analysis of the structure of of conspiracy-related German-language Telegram chats in a novel large-scale data set. We examine how information flows between regional user groups and influential broadcasting channels, revealing the interplay between decentralized discussions and content spread driven by a small number of key actors. Our findings reveal that conspiracy-related activity spikes during major COVID-19-related events, correlating with societal stressors and mirroring prior research on how crises amplify conspiratorial beliefs. By analysing the interplay between regional, national and transnational chats, we uncover how information flows from larger national or transnational discourse to localised, community-driven discussions. Furthermore, we find that the top 10% of chats account for 94% of all forwarded content, portraying the large influence of a few actors in disseminating information. However, these chats operate independently, with minimal interconnection between each other, primarily forwarding messages to low-traffic groups. Notably, 43% of links shared in the data set point to untrustworthy sources as identified by NewsGuard, a proportion far exceeding their share on other platforms and in other discourse contexts, underscoring the role of conspiracy-related discussions on Telegram as vector for the spread of misinformation.
title Characterizing the Dynamics of Conspiracy Related German Telegram Conversations during COVID-19
topic Social and Information Networks
Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.13398