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OP-ED

Four ways your attention is manipulated

Nga televizini i mëngjesit deri te algoritmi i natës manipulimi mediatik në Shqipëri nuk është aksident por sistem.  Dhe ne jemi subjektet e eksperimentit

Four ways your attention is manipulated

Denisa Kele

Every morning, before you have had your first cup of coffee, Albanian television has already decided what you will think about for the whole day. Inaugurations, meetings, kind words: the screen speaks, you listen. And if you turn on another channel, you hear the same story in more or less the same words. This is not an editorial coincidence.

Albania in 2026 is a country where about 80 percent of the broadcast space on the main television channels is dedicated to the government narrative, inaugurations, statements, optimistic statistics, and the figure of the leader. Other voices, the opposition, civil society, and investigative journalism get crumbs of the remaining 20 percent. This is not a random inequality.

80%

MEDIA SPACE FOR THE GOVERNMENT NARRATIVE

22%

CITIZENS' TRUST IN MAJOR MEDIA

68%

THEY FEEL DISSATISFIED BUT DON'T ACT

41%

YOUNG PEOPLE 18–35 YEARS OLD WANT TO EMIGRATE

How media control works.

The mechanism is elegant in its simplicity. The main media are in the hands of business groups with direct interests in public contracts, construction, energy, and concessions. The owners do not need to give editorial orders. The editorial staff knows what to broadcast, because what is broadcast decides whether or not the owner's company wins the next tender.

State advertising, worth millions of euros a year from taxpayers' money, is distributed with unwritten criteria, favorable coverage, and safe advertising. Those media outlets that dare to criticize find themselves without funding, without renewed licenses, without invitations to official conferences. There is no need for censorship laws when the economy does the work.

"There is no open censorship; there is normalized self-censorship. Journalists learn what not to ask, not because someone has forbidden them, but because they have seen what happens to the one who asks."

INDEPENDENT MEDIA ANALYST

The result? Independent journalists work under constant pressure. Some have chosen emigration. Others have chosen self-censorship. A few have chosen resistance and pay the price every day.

Four ways your attention is manipulated

Media control doesn't just work by telling lies. It works primarily by choosing what to tell and what to keep quiet about. This makes the difference between brutal propaganda that citizens recognize and reject, and sophisticated manipulation that goes unnoticed.

The first: overload with activities without substance. Ribbon-cutting ceremonies, road inaugurations, protocol meetings, everything is broadcast as historical events. The citizen is taught to consume "activity" and confuse it with "results." When the corner of the screen is always full, there is no room left for the question, "But what happened to last year's project"?

Second: selective framing. The same fact, rising prices, unemployment, and emigration, is presented differently depending on the channel. In the pro-government media, the heavy statistics are "the legacy of the past" or "global crisis". The citizen is faced with two parallel realities and, tired of the contradiction, chooses not to believe either of them.

Third: the personalization of power. Every real or imaginary institutional success is equated with the figure of the leader. It becomes a state-person, not a state-institution. This creates emotional dependence: you don't value politics; you value the person. And the person, of course, is always friendly, competent, and irreplaceable.

Fourth: the external enemy. When there is no favorable news, the narrative of an attack on Albania is activated by the "foreign-funded" opposition, by critical foreign media, by "dark lobbies". The public is taught to defend... To show solidarity, not to analyze.

What happens to the mind when it is drowned every day

The most dangerous consequence of this architecture is not the disinformation of the moment. It is something much deeper: truth fatigue. When every day the citizen hears contradictory versions of reality, the brain develops a defense mechanism: total skepticism. "Everyone lies" becomes the default attitude.

This skepticism, however, does not lead to the search for truth. It leads to apathy. And political apathy is precisely the ideal climate for a government that wants to govern without accountability. There is no need to extinguish the opposition when the citizens have extinguished themselves.

"The mass emigration of young people is not only read as an economic crisis. Many of them do not leave because they cannot find work; they leave because they cannot find meaning. They feel that whatever they do, reality is written in advance."

This is the final phase of the experiment: when the subject does not revolt and does not demand change, but leaves. And his departure is interpreted as an affirmation of the system: "Look, the one who had the ability left, those who remained are satisfied."

When the algorithm learns to think for you

Television was the first phase. The Internet was supposed to be liberating, and for a brief moment, it was. But governments quickly learned: digital platforms don't necessarily liberate. When they do, they control with a surgical precision that television never had.

If television spoke to millions of people at once with the same message, the algorithm speaks to each one individually with a message personalized to that person, based on their fears, their angers, their prejudices. This makes digital manipulation not only broader but also much deeper.

Coordinated networks of accounts on Facebook and Instagram flood comments with government narratives, attack critics, and massively report activist posts until the platform deletes them.  

Websites with names similar to legitimate media outlets, the difference is one letter, one dash. They publish fabricated news that is quickly distributed in WhatsApp groups. The damage is done within 10 minutes, while verification comes hours late.

WhatsApp chains

Voice messages and manipulated photos are distributed among family groups. They are believed because they come from someone they know. The effect is stronger than television; it has the authority of personal belief.

Purchased SEO

When you search for the name of a corrupt official, the first results are laudatory articles. Investigations sink to the third or fourth page — where no one goes. This doesn't happen by chance.

Deepfake with AI

Synthesized video and audio: politicians "saying" things they never said, "evidence" of events that never happened. The technology is now accessible and free. Albania has already seen cases during electoral campaigns.

The refrigerator effect

Surveillance doesn't have to be real to be effective. Activists report strange phone calls, technical problems when publishing criticism, and unexplained access to their accounts. All it takes is a sense of control, and self-censorship comes automatically.

What can we do, as citizens?

Social experiments have a fundamental weakness: they only work when subjects don't know they are subjects. This article does not claim to reveal any great secret - all of this is documented, known, and discussed. What is missing is not the information, but the decision to act on it.

The way out does not require revolution. It requires something both simpler and more dangerous for any control system, a citizen who thinks for himself and acts as such. Every local community that organizes, every journalist who publishes an investigation, every voter who goes out informed is an uncontrolled variable. And the system fears uncontrolled variables.

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