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Oxford University is ‘for stupid people’, says Philippines president

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Web Desk
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News Stories Posted by ARY News Digital Team

MANILA: Following his disagreement over a research paper describing his social media habits, the President of the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte, has labelled Oxford University as a “school for stupid people” .

According to the university’s report “Troops, Trolls and Troublemakers: A Global Inventory of Organised Social Media Manipulation”, Mr Duterte has spent the equivalent of hundreds of thousands of pounds on hiring social media trolls to promote and defend him on Twitter.

It claims that Duterte’s camp paid $200,000 (£150,000) in 2016, the year he was elected, for a social media campaign that used citizens and groups to promote and defend him online.

Oxford stupid people

Academics Samantha Bradshaw and Professor Philip N. Howard found Mr Duterte had used automated bot accounts to post supportive messages on social media during his 2016 president campaign, and continues to do so now he is in power.

According to local news network ABS-CBN he went on to say: “I don’t need to defend myself from attacks, I’m not anymore eligible for reelection”.

“Oxford University? That’s a school for stupid people,” he added in Filipino.

The Oxford research paper looked at 27 other countries besides the Philippines to examine the prevalence of military or political parties’ commitment to using social media to influence the public.

It is said to be a global phenomenon, with every authoritarian regime studied using social media campaigns to target their own populations.

Only a few of the countries targeted foreign populations, researchers found.

“Over time, the primary mode for organizing cyber troops has gone from involving military units that experiment with manipulating public opinion over social media networks to strategic communication firms that take contracts from governments for social media campaigns.

The report documents how so-called cyber troops have been used to silence political dissent online and on how the methods used can lead to real-life threats and reputational damage.

“In the Philippines”, it states, “many of the so-called ‘keyboard trolls’ hired to spread propaganda for presidential candidate Duterte during the election continue to spread and amplify messages in support of his policies now he’s in power.”

 

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