Bots
eBook - ePub

Bots

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

About this book

Bots – automated software applications programmed to perform tasks online – have become a feature of our everyday lives, from helping us navigate online systems to assisting us with online shopping. Yet, despite enabling internet users, bots are increasingly associated with disinformation and concerning political intervention.

In this ground-breaking book, Monaco and Woolley offer the first comprehensive overview of the history of bots, tracing their varied applications throughout the past sixty years and bringing to light the astounding influence these computer programs have had on how humans understand reality, communicate with each other, and wield power. Drawing upon the authors' decade of experience in the field, this book examines the role bots play in politics, social life, business, and artificial intelligence. Despite bots being a fundamental part of the web since the early 1990s, the authors reveal how the socially oriented ones continue to play an integral role in online communication globally, especially as our daily lives become increasingly automated.

This timely book is essential reading for students and scholars in Media and Communication Studies, Sociology, Politics, and Computer Science, as well as general readers with an interest in technology and public affairs.

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Yes, you can access Bots by Nick Monaco,Samuel Woolley in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Media Studies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

1
What is a Bot?

The 2020 United States presidential election was one of the most impassioned in the country’s history. President Donald Trump and his Democratic opponent Joe Biden both contended they were fighting for nothing less than the future of American democracy itself. The election brought with it several events rarely seen in the history of American democracy – an election held in the middle of a global pandemic, citizens’ storming of the US Capitol, and attempts by a sitting president to overturn the results of a free and fair election. Unprecedented events weren’t only taking place offline, however – social bots, or computer programs posing as humans on social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook, were beginning to use artificial intelligence (AI) techniques to fly under the radar of security teams at social media platforms and target voters with political messages. One of the leading bot detection experts in the US bluntly admitted,
Back in 2016, bots used simple strategies that were easy to detect. But today, there are artificial intelligence tools that produce human-like language. We are not able to detect bots that use AI, because we can’t distinguish them from human accounts. (Guglielmi, 2020)
But bots were not only carrying out covert, deceptive, activity online in 2020. Working with amplify.ai, the Biden campaign deployed a chatbot to interact with users on Facebook messenger and encourage users to vote. This bot’s intent was not to deceive – it would reveal that it was not human if asked – rather it was a means of using AI techniques to try to boost the get-out-the-vote efforts. Amplify.ai’s bots helped Biden reach over 240,000 voters in fourteen states in the three weeks leading up to election day (Dhapola, 2021; Disawar & Chang, 2021). Bots’ activities in the 2020 election illustrated the dual nature of the technology – whether bots are ā€œbadā€ or ā€œgoodā€ for society depends on how they are designed and used.
Until recently, the word ā€œbotā€ was fairly obscure, used mostly in arcane discussions in the academy between scholars, and in Silicon Valley meeting rooms full of computer programmers. The year 2020 was, of course, not the first time bots had been deployed to participate hyperactively in online political discussion in the US. The November 2016 presidential election was the one that gave bots a household name, both in the US and around the world. Journalists and researchers documented the underhanded automated tactics that were being used during that contest to promote both candidates. For many, this was the first time that they realized that political discussions online might not have an actual person on the other end – it might be a piece of software feeding us canned lines from a spreadsheet on the other side of the globe. Now, we can’t seem to get that idea out of our heads. These days, social media users quickly label any antagonistic arguer on social media a ā€œbot,ā€ whether it’s a troll, a disinformation agent, or a true bot (an automated account).
But before bots became a notorious byword for social media manipulation in 2016, they were already a central infrastructural part of computer architecture and the internet. Many bots are benign, designed to do the monotonous work that humans do not enjoy and do not do quickly. They carry out routine maintenance tasks. They are the backbone of search engines like Google, Bing, and Yandex. They help maintain services, gather and organize vast amounts of online information, perform analytics, send reminders. They regulate chatrooms and keep them running when users are fast asleep. They power the voice-based interfaces emerging in AI assistants such as Apple’s Siri, Amazon’s Alexa, or Microsoft’s Cortana. They carry out basic customer service as stand-ins for humans online or on the phone. On the stock market, they make split-second decisions about buying and trading financial securities; they now manage over 60 percent of all investment funds (Kolakowski, 2019). In video games, they run the interactive agents known as non-player characters (NPCs) that converse with human players and advance storylines.
Other bots are malicious. They amplify disinformation and sow discord on social media, lure the lonely onto dating sites, scam unsuspecting victims, and facilitate denial-of-service cyberattacks, crashing websites by overloading them with automated traffic. They generate ā€œdeep fakesā€ – realistic-seeming faces of humans who have never existed, which can serve as a first step to larger fraudulent activity on the web (such as creating fake accounts to use for scams on dating apps). They artificially inflate the popularity of celebrities and politicians, as companies sell thousands of fake online followers for only a few dollars (Confessore et al., 2018).
As obedient agents following their developers’ programming, bots’ uses and ā€œinterestsā€ are as diverse as humans themselves. They can be written in nearly any programming language. They can sleuth from website to website, looking for relevant information on a desired topic or individual. They are active on nearly all modern social media platforms – Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Reddit, Telegram, YouTube – and keep the wheels turning at other popular sites like Wikipedia. They can interact with other users as official customer service representatives, chat under the guise of a human user, or work silently in the background as digital wallflowers, watching users and websites, silently gathering information, or gaming algorithms for their own purposes.
This book is about bots in all their diversity: what they do, why they’re made, who makes them, how they’ve evolved over time, and where they are heading. Throughout these chapters, we’ll draw on research from diverse fields – including communications, computer science, linguistics, political science, and sociology – to explain the origins and workings of bots. We examine the history and development of bots in the technological and social worlds, drawing on the authors’ expertise from a decade of interviews in the field and hands-on research at the highest levels of government, academia, and the private sector.
It’s easy to think bots only emerged on the internet in the last few years, or that their activities are limited to spamming Twitter with political hashtags, but nothing could be further from the truth. Bots’ history is as long as that of modern computers themselves. They facilitate interpersonal communication, enhance political communication through getting out the vote or supercharging low-resourced activists, degrade political communication through spam and computational propaganda, streamline formulaic legal processes, and form the backbone of modern commerce and financial transactions. They also interact with one another – allowing computers to communicate with each other to keep the modern web running smoothly. Few technologies have influenced our lives as profoundly and as silently as bots. This is their story, and the story of how bots have transformed not only technology, but also society. The ways we think, speak, and interact with each other have all been transformed by bots.
Our hope is that through this book, the reader will gain a thorough understanding how technology and human communication intertwine, shaping politics, social life, and commerce. Throughout these seven chapters, we’ll cover all these areas in detail. In this chapter, we give the history of bots and define the different types of bots. In Chapter 2, Bots and Social Life, we explore the role that these computational agents play across global digital society. Chapter 3 explores the various ways that bots have been used for political communications, for both good and bad purposes, focusing especially on the advent of widespread digital campaigning and social media political bots in the last decade. In Chapter 4, we turn to the role of bots in the private sector, detailing commercial uses of automated agents over time in finance, customer service, and marketing. Chapter 5 explores the intersection of bots and artificial intelligence (AI). In Chapter 6, we trace the history of bot theory in academia – drawing on social science, philosophy, art, and computer science – to understand how the conception of bots has evolved over time and to consider bots’ future, particularly as it relates to questions in policy, ethics, and research. Finally, we close with thoughts on the future of bots, and key recommendations for researchers, policymakers, and technologists working on bots in the future.

Where Does the Word ā€˜ā€˜Bot’’ Come From?

ā€œBotā€ is a shortened version of the word ā€œrobot.ā€ While the concept of a self-managing machine that performs tasks has arguably been around for hundreds of years (for example, DaVinci’s 1479 mechanical knight), the word ā€œrobotā€ was not coined until 1920. It was originated by Czech playwright and activist Karel Capek in a play called ā€œRossum’s Universal Robotsā€ (ā€œRURā€). In the play, the titular robots are humanlike machine workers who lack a soul, which are produced and sold by the R.U.R. company in order to increase the speed and profitability of manufacturing. Capek called these machines roboti at the suggestion of his brother Josef, who adapted the term from the Czech words robotnik (ā€œforced workerā€) and robota (ā€œforced labor, compulsory serviceā€) (Flatow, 2011; Online Etymology Dictionary, n.d.). Robota has cognates in other modern European languages, such as the German Arbeit (ā€œworkā€). Inherent in these roots is the idea of forced servitude, even slavery – a robot is an object that carries out tasks specified by humans. This idea is key to the understanding of bots in the online sphere today, where bots are computer programs that carry out a set of instructions defined, ultimately, by a human. There is always a human designer behind a bot.
While ā€œbotā€ began as a shortened form of ā€œrobot,ā€ in the era of the modern internet, the connotations of the two terms have diverged. Bot is now used mostly to designate software programs, most of which run online and have only a digital presence, while robots are commonly conceived of as possessing a physical presence in the form of hardware – of having some form of physical embodiment. Wired journalist Andrew Leonard writes that bots are ā€œa software version of a mechanical robotā€ whose ā€œphysical manifestation is no more than the flicker of electric current through a silicon computer chipā€ (Leonard, 1997, pp. 7–24). Today, social bots’ implementation may involve a visual presence, such as a profile on Twitter or Facebook, but the core of their functioning lies in the human-designed code that dictates their behavior.

History of the Bot

Many people think that bots emerged only recently, in the wake of the incredibly rapid uptake of smartphones and social media. In fact, although they emerged into mainstream consciousness relatively recently, bots are nearly as old as computers themselves, with their roots going back to the 1960s. However, it is difficult to trace the history of the bot, because there is no standard, universally accepted definition for what exactly a bot is. Indeed, bot designers themselves often don’t agree on this question. We’ll begin this history by discussing some of the first autonomous programs, called daemons, and with the birth of the world’s most famous chatbot in the late 1960s.

Early bots – Daemons and ELIZA

Daemons, or background processes that keep computers running and perform vital tasks, were one of the first forms of autonomous computer programs to emerge. In 1963, MIT Professor Fernando Corbato conceived of daemons as a way to save himself and his students time...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Table of Contents
  3. Series Title
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Abbreviations
  8. 1 What is a Bot?
  9. 2 Bots and Social Life
  10. 3 Bots and Political Life
  11. 4 Bots and Commerce
  12. 5 Bots and Artificial Intelligence
  13. 6 Theorizing the Bot
  14. 7 Conclusion: The Future of Bots
  15. References
  16. Index
  17. End User License Agreement