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The Benefit of Collective Intelligence in Community-Based Content Moderation is Limited by Overt Political Signalling

1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

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abstract

Social media platforms face increasing scrutiny over the rapid spread of misinformation. In response, many have adopted community-based content moderation systems, including Community Notes (formerly Birdwatch) on X (formerly Twitter), Community Notes on Meta, and Footnotes on TikTok. However, research shows that the current design of these systems can allow political biases to influence both the development of notes and the rating processes, reducing their overall effectiveness. We hypothesise that enabling users to collaborate on writing notes, rather than relying solely on individually authored notes, can enhance the overall quality of their notes. To test this idea, we conducted an online experiment in which participants jointly authored notes on politically misleading posts. We find that collaboration improves the helpfulness of notes, although the average effect depends on the interactional context. In particular, the benefits of collaboration decline when participants are made aware of one another's political affiliations. We also find that politically diverse teams improve note quality when evaluating Republican posts, while team composition does not meaningfully affect note quality for Democrat posts. These findings underscore the complexity of community-based content moderation and highlight the importance of understanding group dynamics and political diversity when designing more effective moderation systems.

fields

cs.CY 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

How Human Feedback Shapes AI-generated Community Notes

cs.CY · 2026-06-29 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

Human feedback improves AI-generated Community Notes but participation limits their adoption rate, with collaborative notes serving a complementary role to human and AI-only notes.

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  • How Human Feedback Shapes AI-generated Community Notes cs.CY · 2026-06-29 · unverdicted · none · ref 62 · internal anchor

    Human feedback improves AI-generated Community Notes but participation limits their adoption rate, with collaborative notes serving a complementary role to human and AI-only notes.