Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential Election

The purpose of this paper is to analyze 1) who created and distributed fake news, 2) the distribution channels of fake news, 3) who fake news has targeted, and 4) the effects on voting and the impact of fake news on Korean politics. In South Korea, fake news was mainly created by candidates or ele...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Seon-gyu Go, Mi-ran Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CAPORCI
Series:Asian Journal for Public Opinion Research
Online Access:http://ajpor.scholasticahq.com/article/12982-analysis-of-fake-news-in-the-2017-korean-presidential-election.pdf
id doaj-8d17467c48f243d3877369e87c6ffeec
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8d17467c48f243d3877369e87c6ffeec2020-11-25T03:19:06ZengCAPORCIAsian Journal for Public Opinion Research2288-6168Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential ElectionSeon-gyu GoMi-ran LeeThe purpose of this paper is to analyze 1) who created and distributed fake news, 2) the distribution channels of fake news, 3) who fake news has targeted, and 4) the effects on voting and the impact of fake news on Korean politics. In South Korea, fake news was mainly created by candidates or election campaigns. The reason is that in the wake of the impeachment of President Park Guen Hye, all the political parties in Korea used fake news as a means of mobilizing supporters for each of their candidates or parties to gain an advantage in situations involving political divisions and confrontations between the pro-impeachment, progressive young generation and anti-impeachment, conservative senior generation. Voters' media usage patterns were polarized through social network services (SNS) media and television. Fake news was mostly received through these two media outlets. According to the spreading structure of fake news in Korea, the younger generation generally uses SNS posts intended for unspecified individuals, and the older generation uses closed SNS like KakaoTalk or Naver’s BAND. In the end, it is typically characteristic of the older generation to spread fake news through existing offline human networks. In the 2017 presidential election, fake news has been confirmed to have the effect of mobilizing supporters for each political party. In the presidential election, an increase in voter turnout was confirmed among those in their 20s and those in their 60s or older. Evidently, fake news influenced the election of Moon Jae-In. The influence of fake news is expected to grow further as ideological polarization and consequent political polarization continues to intensify in South Korea.http://ajpor.scholasticahq.com/article/12982-analysis-of-fake-news-in-the-2017-korean-presidential-election.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seon-gyu Go
Mi-ran Lee
spellingShingle Seon-gyu Go
Mi-ran Lee
Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential Election
Asian Journal for Public Opinion Research
author_facet Seon-gyu Go
Mi-ran Lee
author_sort Seon-gyu Go
title Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential Election
title_short Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential Election
title_full Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential Election
title_fullStr Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential Election
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Fake News in the 2017 Korean Presidential Election
title_sort analysis of fake news in the 2017 korean presidential election
publisher CAPORCI
series Asian Journal for Public Opinion Research
issn 2288-6168
description The purpose of this paper is to analyze 1) who created and distributed fake news, 2) the distribution channels of fake news, 3) who fake news has targeted, and 4) the effects on voting and the impact of fake news on Korean politics. In South Korea, fake news was mainly created by candidates or election campaigns. The reason is that in the wake of the impeachment of President Park Guen Hye, all the political parties in Korea used fake news as a means of mobilizing supporters for each of their candidates or parties to gain an advantage in situations involving political divisions and confrontations between the pro-impeachment, progressive young generation and anti-impeachment, conservative senior generation. Voters' media usage patterns were polarized through social network services (SNS) media and television. Fake news was mostly received through these two media outlets. According to the spreading structure of fake news in Korea, the younger generation generally uses SNS posts intended for unspecified individuals, and the older generation uses closed SNS like KakaoTalk or Naver’s BAND. In the end, it is typically characteristic of the older generation to spread fake news through existing offline human networks. In the 2017 presidential election, fake news has been confirmed to have the effect of mobilizing supporters for each political party. In the presidential election, an increase in voter turnout was confirmed among those in their 20s and those in their 60s or older. Evidently, fake news influenced the election of Moon Jae-In. The influence of fake news is expected to grow further as ideological polarization and consequent political polarization continues to intensify in South Korea.
url http://ajpor.scholasticahq.com/article/12982-analysis-of-fake-news-in-the-2017-korean-presidential-election.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT seongyugo analysisoffakenewsinthe2017koreanpresidentialelection
AT miranlee analysisoffakenewsinthe2017koreanpresidentialelection
_version_ 1724623579577843712