While research continues to investigate and improve the accuracy, fairness, and normative appropriateness of content moderation processes on large social media platforms, even the best process cannot be effective if users reject its authority as illegitimate. We present a survey experiment comparing the perceived institutional legitimacy of four popular content moderation processes. We conducted a within-subjects experiment in which we showed US Facebook users moderation decisions and randomized the description of whether those decisions were made by paid contractors, algorithms, expert panels, or juries of users. Prior work suggests that juries will have the highest perceived legitimacy due to the benefits of judicial independence and democratic representation. However, expert panels had greater perceived legitimacy than algorithms or juries. Moreover, outcome alignment - agreement with the decision - played a larger role than process in determining perceived legitimacy. These results suggest benefits to incorporating expert oversight in content moderation and underscore that any process will face legitimacy challenges derived from disagreement about outcomes.
翻译:虽然研究继续调查和改进大型社交媒体平台内容调适过程的准确性、公正性和规范性适当性,但如果用户拒绝其权威为非法,即使最佳程序也不能有效。我们进行了一项调查实验,比较了四个受欢迎的内容调适过程所认为的体制合法性。我们进行了一项内科实验,在实验中,我们展示了美国脸书用户的适度决定,并随机描述了这些决定是否由付费承包商、算法、专家小组或用户陪审团作出。先前的工作表明,由于司法独立和民主代表性的好处,陪审团将具有最高的合法性。然而,专家小组认为合法性比算法或陪审团要强。此外,结果协调----与决定的一致----在确定所觉察到的合法性方面比过程发挥更大的作用。这些结果表明,在内容调和过程中纳入专家监督有好处,并强调任何进程都将面临因对结果的分歧而产生的合法性挑战。