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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Fri Sep 29, 2017, 09:50 AM Sep 2017

Russia Linked Social Media Stoked U.S. Culture Wars Through the Election Up to National Anthem Debat

Russia-Linked Social Media Stoked U.S. Culture Wars Through the Election Up to National Anthem Debate

By Elliot Hannon


A video from State-run RT on Facebook.

It’s still early days in our national exploration into how Russia used—and apparently continues to use—social media to influence not just American voters, but American society. It doesn’t seem like much of a stretch to see that, along with great technological advancements of the last decade, is new direct access to individual Americans for external actors, be they companies or governments or individuals. Recently, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg reluctantly opened up about how Russian-linked accounts and troll farms set out to influence voters, including buying political ads and organizing real campaign events in the U.S. Beyond support for Trump’s helter-skelter candidacy, Russian propaganda always hewed to the underlying objectives of creating chaos and enflaming divisions of all sorts, in order to provoke discord and demoralize, in an effort undermine American social and political institutions.

While the different Russia investigations churn on, undertaking often tedious and technical investigative work, there has been a new public focus on the role of the social media companies in aiding the spread of Russian propaganda. It seems clear enough that it happened, but to what extent? The answer to that is still far from clear, but, like a jigsaw puzzle, slowly certain contours are beginning to come together.

On Wednesday, the New York Times reported Twitter accounts suspected of being linked to Russia flooded social media on both sides of the weekend’s debate over players kneeling for the national anthem at NFL games. The accounts, which are under surveillance, used the hashtags #boycottnfl, #standforouranthem, and #takeaknee to inject themselves into Americans' line of sight online. Twitter is particularly fertile ground for attempts at an influence campaign because, unlike Facebook, it does not require users to confirm their identity. “In addition to Russia-linked Twitter accounts that posed as Americans, the platform was also used for large-scale automated messaging, using ‘bot’ accounts to spread false stories and promote news articles about emails from Democratic operatives that had been obtained by Russian hackers,” the Times notes. “Since last month, researchers at the Alliance for Securing Democracy, a bipartisan initiative of the German Marshall Fund, a public policy research group in Washington, have been publicly tracking 600 Twitter accounts — human users and suspected bots alike — they have linked to Russian influence operations. Those were the accounts pushing the opposing messages on the N.F.L. and the national anthem.”

CNN reported Wednesday on another example of Russian attempts to foment divisions online by buying a Black Lives Matter Facebook ad and geotargetting it specifically to two areas of the country where the issue of police violence was particularly raw: Ferguson and Baltimore. From CNN:

The Black Lives Matter ad appeared on Facebook at some point in late 2015 or early 2016, the sources said. The sources said it appears the ad was meant to appear both as supporting Black Lives Matter but also could be seen as portraying the group as threatening to some residents of Baltimore and Ferguson. New descriptions of the Russian-bought ads shared with CNN suggest that the apparent goal of the Russian buyers was to amplify political discord and fuel an atmosphere of incivility and chaos, though not necessarily to promote one candidate or cause over another… [Russian efforts] ranged from posts promoting Black Lives Matter to posts promoting gun rights and the Second Amendment to posts warning about what they said was the threat undocumented immigrants posed to American democracy.


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http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2017/09/27/how_russia_linked_social_media_stoked_u_s_culture_wars.html
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Russia Linked Social Media Stoked U.S. Culture Wars Through the Election Up to National Anthem Debat (Original Post) DonViejo Sep 2017 OP
We are under a full blown attack by the Russian propaganda machine dalton99a Sep 2017 #1
Where will it end? How can we stop it? I fear we are going to dissolve into a puddle of paranoia. jalan48 Sep 2017 #2
Meanwhile, back at the ranch meow2u3 Sep 2017 #3
Federal Government, please hit the "off " switch for those media sites that are ladjf Sep 2017 #4

dalton99a

(81,513 posts)
1. We are under a full blown attack by the Russian propaganda machine
Fri Sep 29, 2017, 09:57 AM
Sep 2017

that seeks to incite division, violence and chaos

meow2u3

(24,764 posts)
3. Meanwhile, back at the ranch
Fri Sep 29, 2017, 10:04 AM
Sep 2017

This so-called adminstration and the repuke leadership is looking the other way while the russkies are invading us.

They had to have accepted laundered rubles; otherwise, they'd be making this cyberinvasion Priority #1.

ladjf

(17,320 posts)
4. Federal Government, please hit the "off " switch for those media sites that are
Fri Sep 29, 2017, 11:50 AM
Sep 2017

known to be infested with Russian moles and spies. Shut them off immediately . Turn them back on after all of the Russian vermin has been eliminated.


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