Conspiracy theories run wild on Amazon
The e-commerce giant has become a hotbed for COVID-19
and QAnon disinformation.
BY MARK
SCOTT
December
22, 2020 3:54 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/amazon-qanon-covid19-coronavirus-disinformation-conspiracy-theories/
Amazon is
profiting from disinformation linked to COVID-19 falsehoods and QAnon, the
debunked conspiracy theory, according to POLITICO's analysis of hundreds of
books sold on the e-commerce giant's global online marketplace.
Across the
company's multiple European and U.S. sites, more than 80 titles advancing
claims that the ongoing pandemic is a hoax; that vaccines are harmful; and that
people should be wary of national lockdowns are easily found — often promoted
by Amazon's own algorithms to entice people to buy conspiracy-laden books.
Roughly 100
books associated with the QAnon movement — or unproven claims there is a
so-called deep state plot to undermine Donald Trump's presidency — are also
readily available within Amazon's online marketplace, in several languages,
based on the analysis.
These
titles have often garnered thousands of positive reviews in which customers
praise conspiracy theories which hold that Bill Gates, Angela Merkel and other
global leaders are using the ongoing pandemic to undermine people's freedoms
for their own gain. Many of the books are included in Amazon's subscription
services, Kindle Unlimited and Audible, which allow people to read and listen to
a selection of e-books and audio books for a monthly charge.
Other
social media giants like Facebook and Google's YouTube have banned QAnon
content from their networks, in part because of its connections to real-world
violence. These platforms have clamped down on COVID-19 disinformation,
including Facebook banning anti-vaccine ads and other dubious content from its
global network.
On Amazon,
many of the COVID-19 and QAnon books are either self-published or promoted by
small publishing houses, then printed and sold through the company's own
publishing division. The e-commerce giant typically takes at least a one-third
cut of all e-book sales, while it pockets around 15 percent when people
purchase traditional books, according to the company's policies.
POLITICO
could not determine how much money the U.S. tech giant had made through the
sale of these digital and traditional books, though it is likely to be a mere
fraction of its yearly book revenue — a figure that Amazon does not break out
from its financial earnings. But many of the conspiracy theory titles,
including "Vaccines Are Dangerous - And Don't Work" by Vernon
Coleman, a well-known anti-vaccine influencer, are best-sellers in several
health, politics and alternative medicine book categories on Amazon, according
to POLITICO's analysis.
"Amazon
is falling short by allowing people to promote these conspiracy theories,"
said Ciaran O'Connor, a disinformation researcher at the Institute for
Strategic Dialogue, a think tank in London that tracks extremist material
online. It "offers online influencers with an infrastructure to monetize
content and material directly linked to disinformation."
In
response, Amazon said that, like other book sellers, it offered customers
titles from a wide variety of viewpoints, and its content policies dictated
what could be sold on its online marketplace. The tech giant outlaws pirated
content and counterfeit goods from being sold on its platform, but does not
have specific rules linked to disinformation or conspiracy theories. The
company has also removed several QAnon and COVID-19 conspiracy books from its
sites in recent months.
"Our
shopping and discovery tools are not designed to generate results oriented to a
specific point of view," said Dagmar Wickham, a company spokesperson, when
asked why Amazon was recommending QAnon and COVID-19 conspiracy theory books to
people on its sites.
Shift in focus
For much of
2020, attention has centered on how the biggest social networks — Facebook,
Google and Twitter — have become hotbeds for disinformation tied to COVID-19
and QAnon. But as these platforms have taken steps to remove such material,
online users have shifted their focus to less-policed parts of the web to
spread conspiracy theories across digital audiences, according to
disinformation experts.
That has
thrown up difficult questions about the right to publish and read content that,
while objectionable to some people, does not break specific laws, and whether
tech companies should clamp down on material that either promotes political
divisions or undermines medical responses to the global pandemic.
Since the
summer, Spotify, Soundcloud and other audio streaming services have seen a
marked increase in conspiracy podcasts. Fringe online groups have also promoted
Amazon, whose online marketplace has become a go-to source for many during
national lockdowns, as a key source of income and influence, based on
POLITICO's review of hundreds of conversations on Telegram, an internet
messaging service favored by white nationalists and other extremist groups.
"A lot
of this stuff exists because platforms haven't had to think about it
before," said Jonathan Bright, a senior research fellow at the Oxford
Internet Institute. "Junk content will exist in the least regulated parts
of the internet."
To
determine how widespread disinformation was on Amazon, POLITICO worked with
researchers from King's College London and the University of Amsterdam who
started with 16 widely available QAnon and COVID-19 conspiracy books on the
e-commerce giant. The academics then relied on the company's own
recommendations — based on automated algorithms that serve up other titles that
may be interesting to its customers — to compile a list of more than 100 books
with ties to disinformation and conspiracy theories.
POLITICO
also conducted a separate review of Amazon's U.S., British, German and French
sites by searching for books associated with QAnon and COVID-19, and similarly
used the company's own recommendations to put together a list of 70 different books.
While the English-language online marketplaces had the most conspiracy theory
content, Amazon's German and French versions also listed reams of such
material, often associated with local groups like Germany's right-wing
identitarian movement and Didier Raoult, the French doctor who promoted an
antimalarial drug to treat COVID-19.
"Amazon's
ecosystem, even before COVID-19, seems to have been a rich place for
hyper-partisan literature that skews predominantly to the right," said
Marc Tuters, an assistant professor at the University of Amsterdam, who worked
on the disinformation project. "Predominantly rightwing publishers are
using Amazon to reach the widest audience possible."
Everywhere you look
It does not take long to find disinformation on
Amazon.
A search
for QAnon or COVID-19 returns scores of books with titles like "Scamdemic:
the COVID-19 agenda" and "QAnon: the awakening begins," based on
POLITICO's analysis.
Many of
these titles are written by leading online influencers like Alex Berenson whose
skeptical take on the global pandemic was initially rejected by Amazon's
self-publishing division. His book was eventually added to the online
marketplace, and became a bestseller, after Elon Musk, Tesla's chief executive
who has also expressed doubt about nationwide lockdowns, criticized the
e-commerce giant on social media for censoring the book. The company said it
had removed Berenson's book "in error."
Much of
this material blurs the line between political, often anti-government, content
and outright falsehoods, making it difficult, if not impossible, to remove the
books for breaching Amazon's content policies. But unlike other platforms that
have tried to reduce the spread of conspiracy theory-related posts and videos,
the e-commerce giant has actively promoted these titles to potential customers,
based on POLITICO's review of the company's online sales network.
On Amazon's
U.S. site, Dave Hayes, a well-known QAnon influencer, has published a series of
e-books to decipher the movement, garnering thousands of positive reviews
despite the claims being mostly debunked. Almost all the reviews were positive
and did not run with disclaimers — steps that other social networks have taken
when handling user-generated conspiracy theory content. Such commentary can
nudge people to buy the books, but there are few, if any, professional reviews
of the QAnon-related content on Amazon, according to the University of
Amsterdam's Tuters.
"The
Qanon posts describe an effort to take America back from the globalists and
Deep State bureaucrats who've been in control of governments, banks, and
politicians for decades," one reviewer, who gave the book five stars,
wrote. "This is not some wild story or conspiracy."
The
e-commerce giant also bundles QAnon books together as potential purchasing
suggestions for would-be customers.
On Amazon's
British site, for instance, "QAnon: An Invitation to The Great
Awakening" — a so-called field guide to the movement — is packaged
together with two other titles that associate QAnon with "destroying the
new world order." The bundle, collectively costing £31.15, is
"dispatched from and sold by Amazon," according to each book's page on
the online marketplace.
The
company's recommendation engine, an automated tool that offers up other titles
people may be interested in, based on others' purchasing histories, similarly
pushes people towards conspiracy theories and disinformation.
In France,
a book titled "COVID-19: the oligarchy exposed," written by a former
senior official from the National Rally, the country's far-right political
party, outlines why global elites are behind the ongoing crisis and how
vaccines could prove to be dangerous. It blurs the line between political
speech and conspiracy theories.
Yet on the
book's Amazon page, the e-commerce giant recommends other books — covering
everything from claims Emmanuel Macron, the French president, caused the virus
to spread, to why Didier Raoult's debunked COVID-19 treatments were correct —
that skew more towards outright disinformation. Similar suggestions appear on
all of the QAnon and COVID-19 books available on the company's multiple sites
reviewed by POLITICO.
"With
COVID-19, people are already moving away from trusted institutions," said
Claire Wardle, co-founder of FirstDraft, a nonprofit organization that works
with news outlets to combat disinformation, including falsehoods linked to the
global pandemic. "They search out information that reinforces their
existing beliefs."
Leonie
Cater contributed reporting.


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