Analyzing Large-Scale Political Discussions on Twitter: The Use Case of the Greek Wiretapping Scandal (#ypoklopes)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- We design a methodology for monitoring and analyzing large-scale political discussions on Twitter (Section 3 and Section 4). The methodology is generic (i.e., it can be replicated to other use cases) and includes the steps of data collection, political inference, bot detection, polarization quantification, and analysis of users and content. An overview of the methodology is depicted in Figure 1.
- We study the Greek wiretappings scandal (see details in Section 2) and collect a dataset of the entire discussion on Twitter with a duration longer than a year (Section 3.2). Moreover, we compile a number of complementary datasets related to political attributions, accounts of the Media, and Twitter bot accounts (Section 3.3). We publicly share these datasets in Dimitriadis et al. (2023).
- We present and discuss the findings of our analysis (Section 5). For example, we show how the volume of tweets changes over time and significantly intensifies upon major events or news publications (Section 5.1), we analyze the role of the Media as the main drivers and influencers of the online discussion (Section 5.2), and we quantify the participation of users attributed to the political “Left” and “Right” in the discussion (Section 5.3) and how polarized they are (Section 5.4).
2. The Greek Wiretapping Scandal
- 14 November 2021: the newspaper “Efimerida ton Syntakton” reports that the National Intelligence Service (NIS) is monitoring citizens, among whom is a Greek journalist covering the story of a 12-year-old refugee from Syria1.
- 16 November 2021: Two days later, the reporter and member of the journalist network “Reporters United”, Stavros Malihoudis, publishes an article entitled “I am the journalist under surveillance by the NIS”2, explaining that he became aware of the fact by the aforementioned story
- January 2022: The journalism groups “Reporters United”5 and “Inside Story”6 published investigations into the passing of an amendment in the Greek parliament on 31 March 2021, that altered the rules for the lifting of confidentiality of communications in Greece and for Predator and “business in Greece”, respectively. In the months that followed, the two groups were at the forefront of the journalistic investigation into the issue of surveillance and wiretapping, which, however, took a long time to start being extensively covered by the mainstream media and, consequently, widely discussed by citizens.
- 6 April 2022: The journalist Thanasis Koukakis files a complaint with the Hellenic Authority for Communication Security and Privacy (ADAE), requesting an investigation into the case of infection of his cell phone with Predator spyware. In the following days, three related journalistic investigations are published.
- 11–15 April 2022: Journalists Tasos Telloglou and Eliza Triantafyllou publish two related investigations in Inside Story, under the headlines “Who was monitoring journalist Thanasis Koukakis’s cell phone?” and “Koukakis surveillance case: The state knows” on 11 and 14 April, respectively. Also, on 15 April, journalists Nikolas Leontopoulos and Thodoris Chondrogiannos published an investigation in Reporters United, according to which the government was monitoring journalist Thanasis Koukakis. In the meantime there has been a statement by the Deputy Minister to the Prime Minister and Government Spokesperson, Yiannis Economou, where he had referred to the Koukakis case as surveillance by a private individual, stating, among other things, that “obviously it is unthinkable in a country like Greece, under the rule of law, for any private individual to be able to monitor another private individual”—a statement that Thanasis Koukakis himself had commented on Twitter.
- 19 May 2022: Google’s Threat Analysis Group announces their assessment, put forth “with high confidence”, that government-backed actors in at least eight countries, including Greece, have obtained exploit software.
- 26 July 2022: Nikos Androulakis, president of the socialists’ political party (PASOK) and MEP, reports the attempted wiretapping of his cell phone.
- 4 August 2022: Publication of a journalistic investigation by “Reporters United” and “Efimerida ton Syntakton”, according to which, certain transactions of Grigoris Dimitriadis (Secretary General of the Prime Minister) are linked to a former manager of the company Intellexa, which markets the Predator spyware.
- 5 August 2022: Resignation of Grigoris Dimitriadis and the head of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) Panagiotis Kontoleon.
- 26 August 2022: Debate in Parliament on the wiretapping case.
- 10 September 2022: A Greek parliament member (with the party of SYRIZA) reports the attempted interception of his mobile phone.
- 7 November 2022: Publication of the first list of public figures allegedly under surveillance by the newspaper “Documento”.
- 8 December 2022: Debate on the new draft law on the NIS at the Plenary Session of the Parliament.
- 10 January 2023: The Prosecutor of the Supreme Court opines that Hellenic Authority for Communication Security and Privacy is not responsible for handling citizens’ requests for information on whether they have been placed under surveillance and cannot address mobile telephony providers in this regard.
3. Data
3.1. Twitter API
3.2. The #ypoklopes Dataset
3.3. Complementary Datasets
4. Methodology: Users and Network Characteristics
4.1. Graph Generation
4.2. Political Inference
4.3. Polarization Detection
4.4. Influencer Identification
5. Analysis and Results
5.1. Quantitative Analysis
- number of tweets, hashtags, users, and URLs;
- most liked, retweeted, and replied tweets;
- most mentioned, influencing, and active users;
- most shared URLs, images, and videos;
- most popular textual content (words, phrases, and hashtags).
5.2. The Role of the Media
5.3. Political Opinions: Left vs. Right
5.4. Polarization
5.5. Communities
6. Related Work
7. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | https://www.efsyn.gr/themata/thema-tis-efsyn/319063_polites-se-kathestos-parakoloythisis-apo-tin-eyp, (accessed on 10 September 2024). |
2 | https://www.reportersunited.gr/6976/eimai-o-dimosiografos-poy-parakoloythei-i-eyp/, (accessed on 10 September 2024). |
3 | https://citizenlab.ca/2021/12/pegasus-vs-predator-dissidents-doubly-infected-iphone-reveals-cytrox-mercenary-spyware/, (accessed on 10 September 2024). |
4 | https://about.fb.com/news/2021/12/taking-action-against-surveillance-for-hire/, (accessed on 10 September 2024). |
5 | https://www.reportersunited.gr/7359/parakoloythiseis-eyp-siopi-o-vasilias-akoyei/, (accessed on 10 September 2024). |
6 | https://insidestory.gr/article/neo-logismiko-kataskopeias-predator-kai-oi-doyleies-stin-ellada, (accessed on 10 September 2024). |
7 | Since the time the survey was conducted (2022–2023), there have been significant changes in the costs incurred with accessing the Twitter API; this would differentiate the costs of the data collection phase in our methodology today. |
8 | Although constructing a directed and weighted graph could provide richer information, the sparsity and variability of our collected dataset would result in poor graph analysis outcomes, as well as we would not be able to apply the polarization and influencer detection algorithms (see Section 4.3 and Section 4.4). |
9 | Similarly, we generate graphs for longer time periods. |
10 | Computational complexity of NetShield is , where n is the number of nodes, k is the number of nodes to select, and m is the number of edges. |
11 | We provide date filtering as an option, so that users can explore the aggregate data and statistics that refer to a specific time period. |
12 | See Section 3.3 and Section 4.4, respectively, for the details of these users |
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Keyword/Hashtag | Comments |
---|---|
υποκλοπές | Words (in Greek or “Greeklish”) |
#υποκλοπες | for “wiretapping”, “surveillance”, etc. |
#υποκλοπές | |
υποκλοπη | |
#παρακολουθήσεις | |
#ypoklopes | |
#watergate | Other commonly used terms |
greekwatergate | for the topic |
predator | Terms related to the software |
#predator | used for the wiretappings |
#predatorgate | |
#pega | |
#spyware | |
#δημητριαδης | Political figures |
#κοντολεων | involved in the scandal |
#κουκακη | Journalist (under surveillance) |
#ανδρουλακης | Politician (under surveillance) |
Category | Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Individuals | 1688 | 74.6% |
Media/Journalists | 407 | 18.0% |
Political Accounts | 97 | 4.3% |
Organizations | 38 | 1.7% |
Bots | 32 | 1.4% |
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Share and Cite
Dimitriadis, I.; Giakatos, D.P.; Karamanidis, S.; Sermpezis, P.; Kiki, K.; Vakali, A. Analyzing Large-Scale Political Discussions on Twitter: The Use Case of the Greek Wiretapping Scandal (#ypoklopes). Journal. Media 2024, 5, 1348-1363. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5030085
Dimitriadis I, Giakatos DP, Karamanidis S, Sermpezis P, Kiki K, Vakali A. Analyzing Large-Scale Political Discussions on Twitter: The Use Case of the Greek Wiretapping Scandal (#ypoklopes). Journalism and Media. 2024; 5(3):1348-1363. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5030085
Chicago/Turabian StyleDimitriadis, Ilias, Dimitrios P. Giakatos, Stelios Karamanidis, Pavlos Sermpezis, Kelly Kiki, and Athena Vakali. 2024. "Analyzing Large-Scale Political Discussions on Twitter: The Use Case of the Greek Wiretapping Scandal (#ypoklopes)" Journalism and Media 5, no. 3: 1348-1363. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5030085
APA StyleDimitriadis, I., Giakatos, D. P., Karamanidis, S., Sermpezis, P., Kiki, K., & Vakali, A. (2024). Analyzing Large-Scale Political Discussions on Twitter: The Use Case of the Greek Wiretapping Scandal (#ypoklopes). Journalism and Media, 5(3), 1348-1363. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5030085