{"source":{"name":"The Evidence Hub - on the regulation of digital services","url":"https:\/\/evidencehub.net","license":"Creative Common CC-BY 4.0 International"},"data":[{"data":[2500000,688000],"name":"Election fraud mentions"}],"_data":[["Period","Election fraud mentions"],["01 January - 08 January 2021","2500000"],["09 January - 15 January 2021","688000"]],"labels":{"name":"Period","values":["01 January - 08 January 2021","09 January - 15 January 2021"]},"metadata":{"link":"https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/technology\/2021\/01\/16\/misinformation-trump-twitter\/","type":"Solution","unit":"Number of mentions","year":"2021","title":"Twitter Ban Effect on Misinformation About Election Fraud on Social Media","topic":"Disinformation","method":"Data collection","source":"Dwoskin, Elizabeth and Craig Timberg. \"Misinformation Dropped Dramatically the Week after Twitter Banned Trump and Some Allies,\" published in The Washington Post, 16 January 2021","sub_topic":"Social media accounts","chart_number":"223","geographical":"United States"},"description":"The chart shows how the online misinformation about election fraud changed after several social media sites suspended President Trump and key allies accounts. The new research by Zignal Labs reported that conversations about \nelection fraud dropped from 2.5 million mentions to 688,000 mentions across several social media sites in the week after Trump was banned from Twitter."}