key: cord-0699528-9ga48544 authors: Babcock, Matthew; Carley, Kathleen M. title: Operation gridlock: opposite sides, opposite strategies date: 2021-07-20 journal: J Comput Soc Sci DOI: 10.1007/s42001-021-00133-9 sha: c6ff6e001f29ab2b2a65baa2e98d5931c450ab57 doc_id: 699528 cord_uid: 9ga48544 Twitter and other social media platforms are important tools for competing groups to push their preferred messaging and respond to opposing views. Special attention has been paid to the role these tools play in times of emergency and important public decision-making events such as during the current COVID-19 pandemic. Here, we analyze the Pro- and Anti-Protest sides of the Twitter discussion surrounding the first few weeks of the anti-lockdown protests in the United States. We find that these opposing groups mirror the partisan divide regarding the protests in their use of specific phrases and in their sharing of external links. We then compare the users in each group and their actions and find that the Pro-Protest side acts more proactively, is more centrally organized, engages with the opposing side less, and appears to rely more on bot-like or troll-like users. In contrast, the Anti-Protest side is more reactive, has a larger presence of verified account activity (both as actors and targets), and appears to have been more successful in spreading its message in terms of both tweet volume and in attracting more regular type users. Our work provides insights into the organization of opposing sides of the Twitter debate and discussions over responses to the COVID-19 emergency and helps set the stage for further work in this area. Online social media platforms have proved to be powerful tools in the dissemination of information, expression of opinion, and in the shaping of public discourse. Political campaigns, advocacy groups, and the public all use these platforms in parallel with traditional venues of TV, radio, print media, community and organization meetings, rallies, and protests to vie for attention and promote their views. It is important to understand how this all is accomplished, especially in periods leading up to important public decisions such as elections, or during emergencies such as the ongoing COVID-19 crisis. In the case of Twitter, much of the attention from academics, politicians, pundits, news media, and the public has focused on issues of political, policy, and electoral discourse, crisis communications during natural disasters and other important events, and to the use of Twitter in relation to offline protests. With respect to collective action, social media in general, and Twitter in particular, plays a role as an organizing mechanism [1] and as a reporting mechanism [2, 3] . Today when protests occur, they co-occur in the streets and on social media. Phrases such as "Twitter Revolutions" give voice to the role of these social media technologies in antigovernment protests [4] . In protest after protest, from the Arab Spring [5, 6] to the Occupy protests [7] , social media has been an integral part of the protest story. The ability of users to use social media to shape and coordinate these protests using disinformation, bots, cyborgs and trolls is seen as a fundamental issue of our time, and is the subject of an emerging area of science referred to as social cybersecurity [8] . Prior studies have shown that discourse in Twitter reflects the changing dynamic of the collective action movement and can be used as part of the gatekeeping process [1] . Before, during, and after protest events, platforms like Twitter are used by participants and observers to plan, inform, coordinate, and to advocate for their positions [9] . Moreover, protesters can operate as a networked organization using Twitter to support and enable coordination [10] [11] [12] . Twitter can be used to provide tactical support such as when telling people where to meet, and as a tool for symbolic association when the sender of the tweet links themselves with a public critic or authority (e.g., by quoting, retweeting, or mentioning them) [13] . The populous periphery agents on Twitter have been found to play important roles in spreading messages from the core conversation relating to protests [14] . On-the-ground protests also serve as jumping off points for conversation, debate, and coordinated political activity on Twitter by non-active observers, reporters, and commenters [15] . When there is a serious opposition to the protest, social media can be employed to curtail protests as well as to provide evidence for arresting protesters [16] . During a protest, social media makes possible the broadcast of first-hand evidence as "citizen reporters" post news, images and videos, but also allows a space for manipulation and the broadcast of disinformation about the protests that may be spread by more intentional "troll" and automated bot accounts. Such activity can create, build, or bridge groups thereby affecting the organization of possible protest or Anti-Protest groups. For example, bot accounts on Twitter were used to create a group of potential EuroMaidan revolutionaries by linking individuals who did not know each other together and were used to create bridges between groups in the 2016 election [17] . The prior research demonstrates that protests groups and discussions about protests on Twitter have organization and that both the narrative and the organization can be manipulated by bots and other actors. While the "war of ideas" has been shown to rage in social media over the course of a protest, less is known about how the opposing sides in such discussions are organized. For example, do opposing sides of a collective action event use social media in the same way? Are the types of actors involved in opposing sides similarly present and active (e.g., are the number of and actions of bots, trolls, verified accounts, and news agencies similar between groups)? Are the narratives in opposition or focused on different issues? How does all this activity change over time? In this work, we explore these research questions through descriptive and network analysis approaches and seek to better understand the role of social media in a collective action event. Our specific concern is with the COVID-19 protest-related messaging on Twitter. We summarize and analyze the Twitter discussion surrounding the first weeks of the anti-lockdown protests organized against state-imposed restrictions to manage the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. We utilize a network analysis approach to compare the Pro-and Anti-Protest groups and their actions in the Twitter discussion to answer the following: 1. Does the Twitter conversation reflect the partisan divide over the anti-lockdown protests? 2. Do the Pro-and Anti-Protest groups contain similar types of users and do such users act in the same way? 3. Over the course of the first weeks of the protests, how does the Twitter conversation change and what does that indicate about the organization of the Pro-and Anti-Protest groups? By answering these questions through this case study, we hope to provide insight into how opposing sides are organized around protests during a time of national emergency. The next section provides background information on the anti-lockdown protests and recent research on COVID-19 and Twitter. Next, we discuss our data collection and annotation methods. We then summarize our results and conclude with a discussion of what they may indicate about the nature of such Twitter discussions with considerations for future work. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, most state governments in the United States implemented various restrictions with the aim of slowing the pace of new cases of the disease, ranging from voluntary shelter in place orders to the mandatory closing of businesses and public spaces. A few small public protests against these restrictions occurred in March 2020, but starting the week of April 12 larger and more numerous protests began taking place. The start of the increase in the size and number of protests coincided with the #OperationGridlock protest in Michigan on April 15 and the release of Trump administration guidelines for opening up on April 16. President Trump also tweeted a series of "Liberate" tweets in support of the protest efforts in Michigan, Virginia, and Minnesota on April 17. The COVID-19 crisis and governmental responses to it in the United States have been marked by divisive rhetoric and partisanship, and the anti-lockdown protests appeared to be no different. There was media reporting on the numerous conservative political groups, anti-gun control advocacy groups, local elected officials, and individuals with close ties to Trump campaign organizations and administration that organized, promoted, and/or supported these protests. Many local organizers of subsequent protests mentioned being inspired by the April 15 OperationGridlock protest that was organized and funded by conservative political groups. Hundreds of web domains with names linked to the protests were set up over the week of April 12-18, including many directly after President Trump tweeted his support of the protestors on April 17. Both Reddit users and internet security researchers determined that many of these pages were set up by anti-gun control groups and other conservative organizations and several were linked to Facebook pages promoting the protests [18] [19] [20] . Some of these pages also appear to have been set up by those trying to sell protest-themed merchandise or the domains themselves, and in one case by someone trying to prevent their use by pro-protestor groups [21] . Anti-vaccine advocates and right-wing militias were also visibly part of the anti-lockdown protests. Mainstream conservative media and individual pundits in the United States promoted the protests, whereas more liberal media pundits questioned or attacked the protests [22] . The majority of the public polled by Pew Research during this uptick in protests stated that they are more worried about opening up too quickly than not quickly enough, though partisan differences related to this subject grew over the period of interest [23] . Early research work on the Twitter conversations around COVID19 generally found that the level of partisanship in US politicians' Twitter communications rose in February and remained elevated into March [24] . Other early work suggested that bot-like accounts are more involved in spreading misinformation or ideology than human-like accounts [25] . A recent unreviewed analysis of tweets using "openup" in late April/early May by Samuel et al. claims that more positive sentiment was used to discuss opening up state restrictions than negative sentiment Samuel et al. Questions remain as to how closely the Twitter conversation regarding the protests mirrors the on the ground support of the protests and how different views on the protests are expressed and organized on the social media platform. Using the public Twitter REST API v1.0, we collected tweets containing the keywords, "operationgridlock", "openup", and "liberate" from April 12 through May 10. We deduplicated the raw collected tweets and pulled out additional tweets not already in our data from the retweets, quotes, or replies where possible. As some of the keywords used in collection are general terms, we removed tweets that had no relation to the anti-lockdown protests or general "open up" conversation in the United States. We annotated the user accounts present in our data in three ways. First we ran BotHunter, a machine learning bot detection tool, and obtained a bot score for each user account [27, 28] The bot score is from 0 to 1, and higher scores indicate that the account appears to act more similarly to certain types of automated accounts (is more "bot-like", if not necessarily an automated account itself). Second, we labeled user accounts as News Agencies based upon a list of known news organization accounts. After deduplication, our data set contained a total of 1,251,895 tweets from 470,567 unique user accounts. As is typical of event-based Twitter datasets, a large majority of the tweets in our data are retweets (86%). Figure 1 below shows the number of tweets, including retweets, over time, with the largest spikes in activity coinciding with the day of the first large demonstration in Michigan and directly after President Trump's "Liberate" tweets. For part of our analysis, we divide up the overall timeline into three periods to analyze changes in networks and activity: Period 1 is April 12 to April 17, Period 2 is April 17 to April 24, and Period 3 is April 24 to May 11. We based these divisions on both the timeline of offline events and the Twitter activity timeline from our collected data. Period 1 represents the period in which the administration announces their openup agenda and the first OperationGridlock protest in Michigan occurs, but before President Trump weighs in directly. The second period represents the week in which President Trump tweets, the reactions to it occur, and the first larger protests after the first OperationGridlock occur. The last period is the remainder of our data that covers the following 2 weeks in which there were additional protests but the level of Twitter activity in our collection was consistently lower. To find Pro-and Anti-Protest communities we investigated the retweet network between user accounts. While retweeting does not necessarily indicate support, such a network may still provide a helpful starting point in finding communities. A preliminary inspection of the retweet network revealed two large groups that dominated the network (Fig. 2a) . Collected tweets containing keywords "operationgridlock", "liberate", and/or "openup" over time We performed Leiden clustering [29] on the full User x User retweet network to find less obvious community structure and created a Leiden Group × Leiden Group retweet network (Fig. 2b) . We manually inspected the most retweeted tweets and found that those sourced from Leiden Group 1 were in favor of the anti-lockdown protests whereas those from Groups 2-4 were against the protests and/or against President Trump's promotion of the protests (see Table 9 in the appendix). This result suggests that the Pro-Protest group is more cohesive and more coordinated than the Anti-Protest group. Using the Leiden Group network we assigned a label to each Leiden Group based on the ratio of retweets from that group that retweeted tweets from Group 1 versus Groups 2-4. Users in groups with a ratio of 0.75 or above were labeled "Pro-Protest", users with a ratio of 0.25 or less were labeled "Anti-Protest", and the rest were labeled as "Mixed" (users accounts not in the retweet network were labeled as "NotLabeled"). As the Pro-Protest groups are dominated by connections to the realDonaldTrump account, we reran the Leiden clustering without that account to see if there were substantial changes in the cluster. Without the realDonaldTrump account, the results of Leiden groupings were similar: Group 1 was still very Pro-Protest and insular, Groups 2-4 were still very Anti-Protest and interactive with each other. We therefore decided to analyze the full networks including the realDonaldTrump account. Our analysis is focused on comparing the users, tweets, and networks of the Pro-Protest conversation with that of the Anti-Protest conversation. The results are summarized in the next section. Table 1 summarizes the number of tweets and users present for each group. There are approximately double the number of Anti-Protest users as Pro-Protest users and very few users that fit our definition of "Mixed". The Anti-Protest users tweeted approximately 1.7 times more tweets than the Pro-Protest users. Table 2 summarizes the tweets by tweet type and group label. It shows how similar the Pro-and Anti-Protest groups are in terms of the percentage of their tweets that are original tweets, retweets, and comments. It also shows that the Pro-and Anti-Protest groups are similar in the number of other accounts they mention and hashtags they use though the Anti-Protest users use hashtags less often. Together the results from Tables 1, 2 are suggesting that although the anti-protest group is using Twitter more to push their message, this message is less coordinated and more varied. In contrast the Pro-Protest group are all pushing a more cohesive similar message as evidenced by the higher use of hashtags. We next considered three different aspects of community: (1) what types of actors are present, (2) the structure of the communications network, and (3) the structural position of the most central actors in those networks. Table 3 summarizes information about the accounts present in the Pro-and Anti-Protest groups. There are low levels of verified users and news organizations with the lowest numbers in the Pro-Protest group. The Pro-Protest group also had the highest levels of accounts with default profiles and suspended accounts (as of May 20, 2020). Default profiles and suspended accounts can signal actors new to Twitter, or actors that violated the terms of service, including bots. We also find that accounts that cannot be labeled as either Pro-or Anti-the protest, have a surfeit of news agencies and verified actors. This supports our observation that this group is largely made up of those reporting on the protest. These results suggest that by and large news agencies are acting in a more objective fashion in their lack of retweeting activity. In addition, they suggest that the Pro-Protest group is more supported by bots and less credible actors. We next compared the full Pro-and Anti-Protest communities on general network metrics for the combined User × User communication network (retweets, comments, and mentions) as summarized in Table 4 . The Pro-Protest network was found to be slightly denser than the Anti-Protest network. This suggests there is slightly more cohesion and coordination within the Pro-Protest group. We also compared the degree and eigenvector centrality of the top 50 most central users in each group, as summarized in Fig. 3 . The top Pro-Protest users measured higher on total degree centrality metrics than the top Anti-Protest users. As users outside of the top 50 are looked at, the users in both groups have similar measures. This higher degree centrality among the top actors in the Pro-Protest group suggests that these actors are more tied to other Pro-Protestors and/or are spending more of their messages mentioning and attacking actors on the Anti-Protest side. One possible indicator of organized activity related to protests is the creation of new accounts to push narratives around such protests. Figure 4 shows the creation dates of the users involved in the conversation by group for those accounts that started since 2019. The creation of what are labeled Pro-and Anti-Protest accounts appear to be similar until March 2020, when there is a spike in Pro-Protest account creation. This result provides further evidence of a possible type of orchestration on the Pro-Protest side of the debate. Table 5 summarizes characteristics of these newer accounts. Approximately 60% of the newer accounts and tweets from newer accounts are from the Pro-Protest group, otherwise, the newer accounts looks relatively similar between the two groups. Figure 5 details the retweet network between these younger user accounts. The majority of newer accounts are not interacting with each other, but for those that do, it appears that the Pro-Protest accounts are interacting with each other more as can be seen by the largest component. It is also of interest that the two most active accounts on the Pro-Protest side overall are located in this main component (one of which is now suspended by Twitter, and both of which have bot scores above 0.75). These two accounts as well as many others shown in Fig. 5 appear to be trolllike accounts upon manual inspection: they are consistently retweeting attacks on the opposite group or praise for their own. These results indicate that both groups have troll-like new accounts active in the conversation, but the Pro-Protester group appears to have more coordination of such accounts. To broadly investigate the differences in content shared by the Pro-Protest and Anti-Protest groups, we obtained the top five most used hashtags and top five most shared website domains (both including retweets) for each group as shown in Tables 6, 7. In terms of hashtags, we can see an emphasis on certain states and the Trump MAGA slogan on the Pro-Protest side and an emphasis on COVID and attacking President Trump (e.g., #25thAmendmentNow) on the Anti-Protest side. There does not seem to be much difference in the use of hashtags between verified and high-bot-score accounts compared with the overall group. In terms of shared domains, the top five for the Pro-Protest side are dominated by either center to far right news sites or social media, while the Anti-Protest side are dominated by center/center left news media, demonstrating the apparent partisan divide. For both sides it appears that verified accounts share link-shortened addresses to a greater degree. Tables 8, 9 show the changes to the top five most shared hashtags and websites by group over the three time periods of interest. The top hashtags shared by Pro-Protest follow the states in which protests were occurring in each time period. The first period also contains pro-Trump hashtags (MAGA and TheGreatAwakening, a reference to pro-Trump conspiracy, QAnon). COVID19 is prominently used throughout by the Anti-Protest users as well as anti-protest/anti-Trump hashtags such as "Covidiots" and "25th AmendmentNow". It should be noted that in the last period the DropOutBiden hashtag appears to have been an attack on the Democratic nominee from progressives. Similarly, the use of MAGA in the last period is in tweets attacking President Trump, his supporters, or the protests. The top five web domains shared by the two groups reiterate their apparent partisan leanings and both groups prominently shared other social media links in the first period. Pro-Protest users continued to do so while the Anti-Protest group shared additional news/opinion sites. the Pro-Protest group (focused mostly on retweets of realDonaldTrump's "Liberate" tweets) and then the response from the Anti-Protest group against both President Trump and the protests, which overtake the Pro-Protest side in volume. This can be seen in the change in number of users with the Pro-Protest side only increasing from 46,056 unique users in Period 1 to 106,575 users in Period 2, while the Anti-Protest side increases from 12,404 to 244,193 users. Additionally, 26.0% of the Pro-Protest users in Period 2 were present in Period 1, whereas for the Anti-Protest side, only 3.5% of the users in Period 2 were from Period 1. These results suggest a higher level of consistent and continued coordination and participation among the Pro-Protest group, while the Anti-Protest group is able to attract a larger number of newer users between periods. We compared the users within each group that are doing the targeting as shown in Figs. 7, 8. In contrast to their targets, there is a much lower level of verified users involved in retweeting, commenting, and mentioning in both groups. The This indicates a higher relative presence of users with low bot scores. This could indicate that the Anti-Protest group is more successful at attracting activity from the general public during the most active period than the Pro-Protest group. It also suggests that the Pro-Protest group's composition is less organic than that of the Anti-Protest group. To obtain an understanding of any differences in how these Pro-and Anti-Protest users operated over time, we also explored the most targeted accounts for each group for each time period (Appendix for Table 11 ). "Most targeted" in this context refers to the accounts that were most retweeted or had the most comments (replies and quotes) directed at them, or which were most mentioned by Pro-or Anti-Protest users. The top five most targeted accounts within each period are dominated by government, political group, pundit, journalist, and news organization accounts. For the retweet and comment networks, the focus is on a mix of verified and unverified accounts for both Pro-and Anti-Protest groups. The top five mentions in both groups are all verified accounts. In looking at the top five targets across the comment and mention networks and all time periods, the most apparent difference between the Pro-and Anti-Protest activity is that the none of the top five targets for the Pro-Protest side are labeled as Anti-Protest, whereas many of the top five targets of Anti-Protest users are Pro-Protest (Pro-Protest users do target NotLabeled user accounts of the Democratic governors of states where protests took place, and such accounts are most likely Anti-Protest though they are not labeled as such due to not being in the retweet networks). To get a wider perspective on which types of accounts were being targeted by each group, we compared the top 100 targets for each group at each time period through the percentage of verified accounts, news organization accounts and highbot-scoring (> 0.75) accounts. As Fig. 9 shows, there are higher percentages of verified accounts in the top 100 most retweeted accounts for the Anti-Protest group in contrast to the Pro-Protest group, especially in the second and third periods. The most commented on and mentioned accounts for both groups have similar percentages of verified accounts, though there are more new organizations being targeted by the Anti-Protest group in some periods. The percentage of targets for the Pro-Protest group that have high-bot scores hovers around 10% in all time periods, whereas for the Anti-Protest group the percentage is between 2 and 5%. This further supports the argument that the Pro-Protest was a less organic coordinated activity; rather, it appears more as a bot amplified and highly coordinated activity. As governments, organizations, and publics continue to respond to and communicate about the COVID-19 crisis it will be helpful to investigate how social media platforms are extending or facilitating debate over policy. In this work we took a broad look at the Twitter conversation around the beginnings of the anti-lockdown protests in the United States. After determining that the overall Twitter discussion does mirror the partisan divide over the protests based on the opposing sides retweet activity, use of hashtags, sharing of external links, and support of popular tweets, we then contrasted the organization of these groups in terms of their members and their activity. Our results suggest that there were different strategies at play and that these differences can be summarized as having to do with the presence and attention paid to verified and high-bot-scoring accounts and with the levels of network centralization. Automated accounts, trolls, and booster accounts have come to be ubiquitous in political discussions on Twitter, and the debate over OperationGridlock and early anti-lockdown protests was no different. While in raw numbers there were more high-bot-score accounts in the Anti-Protest community, the Pro-Protest side had a higher percentage of and appeared to put more attention on such accounts. The Fig. 9 Characteristics of top 100 users being retweeted, commented, or mentioned by group and period. For example, approximately 70% of the top 100 accounts retweeted by Anti-Protest users in the 2nd period were verified accounts most striking result related to this is the lack of flattening of the bot score distribution of the Pro-Protest group in Period 2 compared to that of the Anti-Protest group. Throughout all time periods the Pro-Protest group appears to engage similar types of accounts, whereas the Anti-Protest group appears to engage a much larger share of less bot-like accounts during the most active period (Fig. 8) . Additionally, a consistently higher percentage of the accounts being retweeted by the Pro-Protest group are those with higher bot scores. Similarly, the apparent coordination of some of the most newly created accounts in the discussion also suggests additional organization on the part of some of the Pro-Protest group. In terms of verified accounts, the Anti-Protest group appears to utilize larger numbers of such accounts to a greater extent than the Pro-Protest group, both in terms of active users and in terms of the number of targets for retweeting. The Pro-Protest group does push content from verified accounts (and in fact the top most retweeted users by Pro-Protest users are verified accounts), but they do so from a smaller number of accounts, especially in Periods 2 and 3. In contrast, the Anti-Protest group retweets content from a much larger number of verified accounts in those same two periods; almost 70% of the unique users retweeted by the Anti-Protest side are verified compared to about 25% by Pro-Protest users. Additionally, while both low, the percentage of active verified users on the Anti-Protest side is consistently over four times as great as for the Pro-Protest side. A commonality between both groups is the similar attention paid to verified accounts through comments or mentions, both of which are more likely to be discussions or attacks rather than the passive or active spreading of messages through retweets. This phenomenon of the Pro-Protest group concentrating attention on a smaller number of important users than the Anti-Protest group is reiterated when looking at the full communication networks and the centrality of the users in those networks. Higher centrality scores for the top users in the Pro-Protest group indicate more attention on them from their own group, whereas the Anti-Protest side appears to focus on a larger number of central users. The reliance on multiple central agents has previously been found as a distinguishing factor in how Democrat politicians operate on Twitter, though in this case, it could also be driven by the different types of attacks (some anti-protest, and some more directed at attacking President Trump's support than the protests themselves). In looking at effectiveness, it appears based on simply the volume of tweets and types of users involved that the Anti-Protest group was more effective at spreading their messaging during the second period (which is where the majority of the discussion occurred) than the Pro-Protest group. This may in part be due to the Anti-Protest group's ability to engage larger numbers of more normal-looking accounts and/or their reliance on more activity and content from verified accounts (who typically have large follower bases). The Pro-Protest group appears to be more concentrated around President Trump and a small group of allied users but did not increase engagement as effectively. Future work could explore how misinformation and/or corrective information are passed on by the different organizational states or strategies as alternative measures of effectiveness to the number of engaged or the volume of tweets. Overall, these results suggest that the Pro-Protest side was more centrally coordinated and less organic than the Anti-Protest side. This is supported by the larger role of bot-like or troll-like accounts, the involvement of newer accounts, and the more central role of top users. In contrast, the Anti-Protest side was characterized by being more organic, less centrally coordinated, larger, and less cohesive. This is seen in the lesser role of bot and troll-like accounts, the higher number of verified actors, the high temporal volatility in membership, and the lower level of interaction among members. Similarly, we note that the Pro-Protest side had a single focused agenda; whereas, the Anti-Protest side had a more scattered agenda. This work is a broad look at the Twitter conversation around the start of the antilockdown protests. It is limited by the fact that the data are based on specific keyword searches and therefore may miss part of the overall conversations, especially in the later time period. We also lack data on the friends/followers networks and "likes", both of which may help to provide clearer separation between the Pro-and Anti-Protest sides. Overall, it appears that our retweet-based approach to exploring communities did enable us to find general distinctions to use as the basis of our analysis. We find many ways to coordinate, but the level and type of coordination is different for both sides of the protest. Further insights about how Twitter is used to report on and support or detract from the anti-lockdown protests and the general open-up debate in the United States could be gleaned from additional work focusing on state to state comparisons and the timing of real world and twitter events. This would further our understanding of how partisan battles over policy during times of crisis are conducted on Twitter, which in turn can help inform how the public and others participate in such debates. "Three nurses showed up to counter-protest the Arizona "liberate" rally. They stood silently. And the "liberate" crowd didn't leave them alone. They stood in their faces and berated them. These women are heroes, and deserve so much better. https://t. co/ h3NrL fvN13" "I don't understand how these nurses protesting in front of the White House today didn't get 10 × as much attention as the "liberate" lunatics. https://t. co/ SePKb TPVW8" 17,503 Social media and the organization of collective action: using twitter to explore the ecologies of two climate change protests. The Communication Review All a twitter: How social networking shaped Iran's election protests. Heritage Foundation Backgrounder Twitter, YouTube, and Flickr as platforms of alternative journalism: the social media account of the 2010 Toronto G20 protests Twitter revolutions? Addressing social media and dissent. The Communication Review The Arab spring and social media audiences: english and arabic twitter users and their networks High dimensional network analytics: mapping topic networks in Twitter data during the Arab spring Anatomy of protest in the digital era: a network analysis of twitter and occupy wall street Engineering, and medicine: a decadal survey of the social and behavioral sciences: a research agenda for advancing intelligence analysis How social media facilitates political protest: information, motivation, and social networks: social media and political protest A model of crowd-enabled organization: theory and methods for understanding the role of twitter in the occupy protests Using Twitter to mobilize protest action: online mobilization patterns and action repertoires in the Occupy Wall Street, Indignados, and Aganaktismenoi movements Facebook to mobilize, twitter to coordinate protests, and youtube to tell the world: new media, cyberactivism, and the Arab Spring Through a glass, darkly: tactical support and symbolic association in twitter messages commenting on stuttgart 21 The critical periphery in the growth of social protests Covering protests on twitter: the influences on journalists' social media portrayals of left-and right-leaning demonstrations in Brazil Iran: downside to the "twitter revolution Emerging research challenges and opportunities in computational social network analysis and mining Reopen domains: shut the front Dorr Security researchers say the reopen America Campaign is being astroturfed Krebs on Security: Who's behind the "Reopen" domain surge?-Krebs on Security How an "old hippie" got accused of astroturfing the right-wing campaign to reopen the economy The quiet hand of conservative groups in the anti-lockdown protests Americans remain concerned that states will lift restrictions too quickly Elusive consensus: polarization in elite communication on the COVID-19 pandemic What types of COVID-19 conspiracies are populated by twitter bots? FM arXiv Feeling positive about reopening? New normal scenarios from COVID-19 US reopen sentiment analytics Bot-hunter: a tiered approach to detecting & characterizing automated activity on twitter Finding and characterizing information warfare campaigns From Louvain to Leiden: guaranteeing wellconnected communities Acknowledgements This work was funded by the Office of Naval Research, grant number N00014-17-1-2675, (for the development of tools). This research was also supported by the Knight Foundation under the auspices of the CMU Center for Informed Democracy and Social-Cybersecurity (IDeaS).Funding This work was funded by the Office of Naval Research, grant number N00014-17-1-2675, (for the development of tools). This research was also supported by the Knight Foundation under the auspices of the CMU center for Informed Democracy and Social cybersecurity (IDeaS). Code availability ORA analysis software is available. Conflict of interest The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest presented in this work. See Tables 10, 11.