Mindful or mindless? How and why virtual communities fail to contain information pollution across different disasters
Mindful or mindless? How and why virtual communities fail to contain information pollution across different disasters
People visit virtual communities to find trusted information (i.e., verifiable, accurate and reliable information) during disasters. Virtual communities are open spaces where people interact and share information. However, virtual communities often suffer from information pollution (including too much information and false or contradictory information) which decreases peoples’ ability to find trusted information. Oddly, some virtual communities will develop useful practices for combatting information pollution during one disaster, but subsequently fail to effectively employ the same practices or adapt them in subsequent disasters. We conducted a longitudinal, exploratory cross-case study to better understand how and why this occurs. Using the lenses of organisational mindfulness/mindlessness, we find three factors: (i) organisational forgetting, (ii) blaming, and (iii) social fracturing that may cause virtual communities to act mindlessly and prevent them from containing information pollution during a disaster. Practically, virtual communities may avoid mindlessness by (i) codifying past successful practices and adapting them, (ii) monitoring the rhetoric of blame and building trust in authorities, and (iii) avoiding inconsequential debates and promoting shared values.
Virtual communities, disaster, mindfulness, mindlessness, qualitative case study
362-386
Hasan, Mahmudul
84f09237-2031-4c24-aa7d-c9593482bd26
Bahar, Varqa Shamsi
9d5ae13c-eb5e-45de-8fa4-0f6437bea872
Chua, Cecil Eng Huang
ba420e9f-de43-4fe5-9c75-11e0aca559d9
Myers, Michael David
6ef59212-863e-4b09-9802-0afc1d64ac71
December 2025
Hasan, Mahmudul
84f09237-2031-4c24-aa7d-c9593482bd26
Bahar, Varqa Shamsi
9d5ae13c-eb5e-45de-8fa4-0f6437bea872
Chua, Cecil Eng Huang
ba420e9f-de43-4fe5-9c75-11e0aca559d9
Myers, Michael David
6ef59212-863e-4b09-9802-0afc1d64ac71
Hasan, Mahmudul, Bahar, Varqa Shamsi, Chua, Cecil Eng Huang and Myers, Michael David
(2025)
Mindful or mindless? How and why virtual communities fail to contain information pollution across different disasters.
Journal of Information Technology, 40 (4), .
(doi:10.1177/02683962251376678).
Abstract
People visit virtual communities to find trusted information (i.e., verifiable, accurate and reliable information) during disasters. Virtual communities are open spaces where people interact and share information. However, virtual communities often suffer from information pollution (including too much information and false or contradictory information) which decreases peoples’ ability to find trusted information. Oddly, some virtual communities will develop useful practices for combatting information pollution during one disaster, but subsequently fail to effectively employ the same practices or adapt them in subsequent disasters. We conducted a longitudinal, exploratory cross-case study to better understand how and why this occurs. Using the lenses of organisational mindfulness/mindlessness, we find three factors: (i) organisational forgetting, (ii) blaming, and (iii) social fracturing that may cause virtual communities to act mindlessly and prevent them from containing information pollution during a disaster. Practically, virtual communities may avoid mindlessness by (i) codifying past successful practices and adapting them, (ii) monitoring the rhetoric of blame and building trust in authorities, and (iii) avoiding inconsequential debates and promoting shared values.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 24 August 2025
Published date: December 2025
Additional Information:
© Association for Information Technology Trust 2025. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
Keywords:
Virtual communities, disaster, mindfulness, mindlessness, qualitative case study
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 505847
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505847
ISSN: 0268-3962
PURE UUID: 16cf29fc-d83d-4daa-b469-46426488c41c
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Date deposited: 21 Oct 2025 16:47
Last modified: 05 Dec 2025 03:02
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Contributors
Author:
Mahmudul Hasan
Author:
Varqa Shamsi Bahar
Author:
Cecil Eng Huang Chua
Author:
Michael David Myers
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