News | National
6 Mar 2026 15:59
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    A few weeks of X’s algorithm can make you more right-wing – and it doesn’t wear off quickly

    Elon Musk’s social media platform is boosting conservative content – and it’s having long-lasting effects on how users see the world.

    Timothy Graham, Associate Professor in Digital Media, Queensland University of Technology
    The Conversation


    A new study published today in Nature has found that X’s algorithm – the hidden system or “recipe” that governs which posts appear in your feed and in which order – shifts users’ political opinions in a more conservative direction.

    Led by Germain Gauthier from Bocconi University in Italy, it is a rare, real-world randomised experimental study on a major social media platform. And it builds on a growing body of research that shows how these platforms can shape people’s political attitudes.

    Two different algorithms

    The researchers randomly assigned 4,965 active US-based X users to one of two groups.

    The first group used X’s default “For You” feed. This features an algorithm that selects and ranks posts it thinks users will be more likely to engage with, including posts from accounts that they don’t necessarily follow.

    The second group used a chronological feed. This only shows posts from accounts users follow, displayed in the order they were posted. The experiment ran for seven weeks during 2023.

    Users who switched from the chronological feed to the “For You” feed were 4.7 percentage points more likely to prioritise policy issues favoured by US Republicans (for example, crime, inflation and immigration). They were also more likely to view the criminal investigation into US President Donald Trump as unacceptable.

    They also shifted in a more pro-Russia direction in regards to the war in Ukraine. For example, these users became 7.4 percentage points less likely to view Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy positively, and scored slightly higher on a pro-Russian attitude index overall.

    The researchers also examined how the algorithm produced these effects.

    They found evidence that the algorithm increased the share of right-leaning content by 2.9 percentage points overall (and 2.5 points among political posts), compared with the chronological feed.

    It also significantly demoted the share of posts from traditional news organisations’ accounts while promoting or boosting posts from political activists.

    One of the most concerning findings of the study is the longer-term effects of X’s algorithmic feed. The study showed the algorithm nudged users towards following more right-leaning accounts, and that the new following patterns endured even after switching back to the chronological feed.

    In other words, turning the algorithm off didn’t simply “reset” what people see. It had a longer-lasting impact beyond its day-to-day effects.

    One piece of a much bigger picture

    This new study supports findings of similar studies.

    For example, a study in 2022, before Elon Musk had bought Twitter and rebranded it as X, found the platform’s algorithmic systems amplified content from the mainstream political right more than the left in six out of the seven countries.

    An experimental study from 2025 re-ranked X feeds to reduce exposure to content that expresses antidemocratic attitudes and partisan animosity. They found this shifted feelings towards their political opponents by more than two points on a 0–100 “feeling thermometer”. This is a shift the authors argued would have normally taken about three years to occur organically in the general population.

    My own research offers another piece of evidence to this picture of algorithmic bias on X. Along with my colleague Mark Andrejevic, I analysed engagement data (such as likes and reposts) from prominent political accounts during the final stages of the 2024 US election.

    Our findings unearthed a sudden and unusual spike in engagement with Musk’s account after his endorsement of Trump on July 13 – the day of the assassination attempt on Trump. Views on Musk’s posts surged by 138%, retweets by 238%, and likes by 186%. This far outstripped increases on other accounts.

    After July 13, right-leaning accounts on X gained significantly greater visibility than progressive ones. The “playing field” for attention and engagement on the platform was tilted thereafter towards right-leaning accounts – a trend that continued for the remainder of the time period we analysed in that study.

    Not a niche product

    This matters because we are not talking about a niche product.

    X has more than 400 million users globally. It has become embedded as infrastructure – a key source of political and social communication. And once technical systems become infrastructure, they can become invisible – like background objects that we barely think about, but which shape society at its foundations and can be exploited under our noses.

    Think of the overpass bridges Robert Moses designed in New York in the 1930s. These seemed like inert objects. But they were designed to be very low, to exclude people of colour from taking buses to recreation areas in Long Island.

    Similar to this, the design and governance of social media platforms also has real consequences.

    The point is that X’s algorithms are not neutral tools. They are an editorial force, shaping what people know, whom they pay attention to, who the outgroup is and what “we” should do about or to them – and, as this new study shows, what people come to believe.

    The age of taking platform companies at their word about the design and effects of their own algorithms must come to an end. Governments around the world – including in Australia where the eSafety Commissioner has powers to drive “algorithmic transparency and accountability” and require that platforms report on how their algorithms contribute to or reduce harms – need to mandate genuine transparency over how these systems work.

    When infrastructure become harmful or unsafe, nobody bats an eye when governments do something to protect us. The same needs to happen urgently for social media infrastructures.

    The Conversation

    Timothy Graham receives funding from the Australian Research Council (ARC) for the Discovery Project, 'Understanding and Combatting "Dark Political Communication"'.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2026 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     06 Mar: Kiwi golfer Nick Voke (like folk] is soaring at the Japan-Australasia Championship in Auckland, after a blemish-free second round
     06 Mar: English doesn’t need protecting in New Zealand – but other languages do
     06 Mar: In Trump’s precarious world, NZ will need all the middle-sized friends it can get
     06 Mar: A man's been charged after allegedly stealing more than 20-thousand dollars worth of items from a Manawatu library
     06 Mar: All fire permits are suspended in the Queenstown Lakes District - as hot and windy weather has raised the fire risk to extreme
     06 Mar: A post-mortem will be carried out today on the person who died in a fire in Auckland's Otahuhu on Wednesday night
     06 Mar: Who is Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s presumed next supreme leader? And would he bring change – or more brutal suppression?
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Former All Black Sonny Bill Williams is saluting the choice of Dave Rennie as the new national men's rugby coach More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Consumer spending has increased in February, signalling a positive recovery within the retail sector More...



     Today's News

    International:
    Inside Iran, some citizens are already preparing for 'freedom day' 15:57

    Rugby League:
    The New Zealand Warriors won't be rolling out the welcome mat for Daly Cherry-Evans, when he makes his Sydney Roosters debut in tonight's NRL contest at Mt Smart 15:37

    Cricket:
    The Black Caps say they're relaxed as they start to count down to the Twenty20 World Cup final win over South Africa at Kolkata 15:37

    International:
    Air travel may be disrupted by the Iran war for months. This is why 15:37

    Entertainment:
    Val Chmerkovskiy has been hospitalised with vertigo during the Dancing With The Stars live tour 15:35

    Environment:
    Pygmy long-fingered possum and glider leap from fossil record to life in New Guinea forest 15:17

    Entertainment:
    Baz Luhrmann is determined to "grow old disgracefully" by wearing "crazy" outfits 15:05

    Golf:
    Kiwi golfer Nick Voke (like folk] is soaring at the Japan-Australasia Championship in Auckland, after a blemish-free second round 14:47

    Entertainment:
    John Davidson's home was burgled while he was away in London attending the BAFTAs ceremony 14:35

    International:
    US 'accelerating' war in Iran as Israel threatens to 'bring hell' to Lebanon 14:07


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2026 New Zealand City Ltd