How to read your social media feeds on Election Day

The Twitter logo is seen on a cell phone, Friday, Oct. 14, 2022, in Boston. While amount of chaos is expected after a corporate takeover, as are layoffs and firings, Elon Musk鈥檚 murky plans for Twitter 鈥 especially its content moderation, misinformation and hate speech policies 鈥 are raising alarms about where one of the world鈥檚 most high-profile information ecosystems is headed. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)

Voters in the U.S. who go on Twitter, TikTok, Facebook or other platforms to learn about Tuesday's pivotal U.S. midterm elections are likely to encounter rumors, hearsay and misinformation.

There's also a lot of useful information on , including authoritative results from election officials, the latest news about candidates and races, and the perspectives of the voters casting ballots.

Here are some tips for navigating social media on Election Day 鈥 and in the days or weeks that follow.

MISHAPS WILL HAPPEN. IT DOESN'T MEAN THERE IS FRAUD

Elections are run by humans, and mistakes are unavoidable. Yet, stripped of context, stories of irregularities at polling places and election offices can be used as evidence of widespread fraud.

And with so much happening on Election Day, election workers, local officials and even the media can have little time to push back on such claims before they go viral.

In Georgia in 2020, a at a site where ballots were being counted was used to spin a far-fetched tale of ballot rigging. In Arizona, the filling out ballots led to similarly preposterous claims.

Neither incident affected the results, yet both continue to show up in misleading posts as evidence of fraud.

鈥淭he internet allows people to create their own evidence from scratch, and then spread it to millions of others,鈥 said John Jackson, dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. 鈥淭hat doesn't mean their evidence means anything, but it does mean that we all have to be better at evaluating what they're saying.鈥

KNOW YOUR BLIND SPOTS

Misinformation thrives when people are looking for information to explain something they don't understand. That creates a big opportunity for those looking to confuse or mislead voters.

The complicated rules and checks-and-balances governing American elections vary from state to state. They can baffle someone not well versed in election procedures, and that confusion has allowed misinformation to thrive.

Many of the misleading claims spreading ahead of the election focused on issues of voting mechanics: voter registration, mail ballots and vote tallying. Many have tried to educate the public in recent months with social media posts, articles and ads about the system so many people take for granted.

鈥淎nytime people don鈥檛 understand something, there鈥檚 a vacuum that needs to be filled,鈥 said A.J. Nash, vice president for intelligence at ZeroFox, a cybersecurity firm that has been tracking election misinformation this year. 鈥淭he question is: What ends up filling that vacuum?鈥

CHECK YOUR SOURCES

If you鈥檙e looking for election results, go to local and state election websites and trusted local and national news outlets.

If you see someone posting about problems at a polling place, for instance, check the social media feed or website of the local election office.

Avoid getting all your information about the election from social media. Rules about content moderation vary widely from platform to platform, and enforcement can be spotty. Even the owners of the platforms themselves are not immune from spreading misinformation, as , Elon Musk has done.

A well-rounded media diet heavy on authoritative, trustworthy sources can help people avoid falling for, or spreading, misinformation, according to Bhaskar Chakravorti, who studies technological change and society and is the dean of global business at the Fletcher School at Tufts University.

鈥淒o you consult original sources, or do you just get your news from social media?鈥 Chakravorti said. 鈥淚f you are only using sources from social media, you are going to be more vulnerable to misinformation.鈥

PAY ATTENTION TO YOUR EMOTIONS

The most viral misleading claims to persuade a person to believe something that isn't true.

Emotionally charged language is one of the most effective: Be suspicious of any claim that seems designed to provoke a strong emotional response like fear or anger. These strong feelings can cause a person to repost a false claim before they've had a chance to think it over.

Second-guess any claim that doesn't provide its sources or makes one-sided assertions. Be equally suspicious of exaggerated claims, misleading comparisons and claims that single out groups of people by race or background.

If something seems too good 鈥 or too horrifying 鈥 to be true, check it out. Someone may be trying to fool you, said Rebecca Rayburn-Reeves, a senior behavioral researcher at Duke University鈥檚 Center for Advanced Hindsight, which develops ways to make people more resilient to misinformation.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all about using your critical thinking,鈥 Rayburn-Reeves said. 鈥淏e open-minded, but also skeptical. I say: Be an amiable skeptic.鈥

BE PATIENT! IT TAKES TIME FOR RESULTS TO BE COUNTED

The U.S. has a long history of elections that took days, weeks or even months to settle. Recent increases in the use of mail ballots have only increased the certainty that

Election officials in several states have already announced that they expect some results to take longer. In key battleground states like Pennsylvania, Michigan and Arizona, mail ballots until Election Day, guaranteeing delays.

Yet the idea that voting delays equal fraud continues to reverberate online, and is likely to continue spreading long after Election Day thanks to candidates and politicians who have amplified the claim, according to Larry Norden, senior director of the elections and government program at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University.

鈥淚t leaves room for doubt, and people will take advantage of that,鈥 Norden told the AP. 鈥淚t's part of a deliberate effort to undermine confidence in elections.鈥

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Follow the AP’s coverage of misinformation at . Follow the AP for full coverage of the 2022 midterm elections at and on Twitter at . And check out to learn more about the issues and factors at play in the midterms.

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