0 оценок0% нашли этот документ полезным (0 голосов)
1K просмотров12 страниц
CBC's Marketplace commissioned media marketing company Cision to analyze the use of intolerant language by Canadians online between the months of October 2015 until November 2016. This search included a 1% representative sample of all Twitter mentions, thousands of web forums, blogs, and news media websites. This search contained 40 derogatory terms that are either racist or religiously or ethnically offensive. Cision segmented these mentions further into two groups, one focused on white supremacist language, the second on Islamophobia, to provide a better picture of the types of intolerant language being used by Canadians, how it has changed over time and the types of discussions that include this language.
CBC's Marketplace commissioned media marketing company Cision to analyze the use of intolerant language by Canadians online between the months of October 2015 until November 2016. This search included a 1% representative sample of all Twitter mentions, thousands of web forums, blogs, and news media websites. This search contained 40 derogatory terms that are either racist or religiously or ethnically offensive. Cision segmented these mentions further into two groups, one focused on white supremacist language, the second on Islamophobia, to provide a better picture of the types of intolerant language being used by Canadians, how it has changed over time and the types of discussions that include this language.
CBC's Marketplace commissioned media marketing company Cision to analyze the use of intolerant language by Canadians online between the months of October 2015 until November 2016. This search included a 1% representative sample of all Twitter mentions, thousands of web forums, blogs, and news media websites. This search contained 40 derogatory terms that are either racist or religiously or ethnically offensive. Cision segmented these mentions further into two groups, one focused on white supremacist language, the second on Islamophobia, to provide a better picture of the types of intolerant language being used by Canadians, how it has changed over time and the types of discussions that include this language.