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marble falls

(57,405 posts)
Sun Mar 25, 2018, 12:10 PM Mar 2018

Russian bots were sowing discord during hunt for Austin bomber, group says

Russian bots were sowing discord during hunt for Austin bomber, group says

By Jeremy Wallace, Houston Chronicle
March 23, 2018 Updated: March 23, 2018 11:12pm

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/politics/texas/article/Russian-bots-were-sowing-discord-during-hunt-for-12777736.php?utm_source=chron&utm_medium=linkmodule&utm_campaign=btfpm

<snip>

The Alliance for Securing Democracy shows on its website that there was a dramatic spike — a 1,000 percent increase — in activity on social media sites by Russian affiliated accounts starting Monday. On social media platforms like Twitter, Russian bots were fanning suggestions that media weren’t covering the bombings because the first victims of the attacks were black or Hispanic.

The nonprofit, bipartisan group tracks hundreds of Twitter accounts of human users and suspected bots linked to Russia. That includes those tied to known Russian propaganda outlets as well as automated bots that launch high volumes of posts that closely mirror hundreds of other accounts. Bots are a type of chat tool used in in social media networks to automatically create and send messages.

<snip>

As in past cases, Russian bots try to amplify posts that create wedges between Americans along racial or religious lines.

The tactics are confusing and difficult to understand, even for foreign policy experts.

On one hand, Russia is trying to show it is still a force that has to be dealt with, and on the other they are becoming more isolated as their activities are condemned around the globe and result in more sanctions, said Joshua Shifrinson, who teaches a course in U.S. foreign relations and international security at Texas A&M University.

“I don’t think anyone fully understands what the Russian end game is here,” Shifrinson said.

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who is leaving the administration at the end of this month, last week called Russia’s recent activities troubling.

“Russia must assess carefully as to how its actions are in the best interest of the Russian people and of the world more broadly,” Tillerson said.

<snip>

That is what happened in Houston in 2016 outside the Islamic Da’wah Center, according to Congress. In May 2016, a rally that pitted people waving White Lives Matter signs against people with bullhorns denouncing them, was staged by Russian-backed social media groups that were trying to incite unrest.

In the days before the rally, a Russian-linked group calling itself the Heart of Texas called on people in Houston to attend a rally to “Stop the Islamification of Texas.” It included encouragement for people to bring firearms.

At the same time, another Russian-linked group promoted a counter rally at the same location at the same time, urging people to “Save Islamic Knowledge.”

The rally grew raucous at times but was mostly peaceful.

The Texas targets were just a small part of the tidal wave of digital misinformation spread by Russians in 2016. According to congressional testimony from leading internet content platforms, about 126 million Facebook users saw content from Russians during the presidential election year and more than 1,100 videos related to Russian efforts were posted on YouTube. In addition, there were an estimated 1.4 million tweets from more than 36,000 Russian bots.

jeremy.wallace@chron.com

twitter.com/JeremySWallace

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Russian bots were sowing discord during hunt for Austin bomber, group says (Original Post) marble falls Mar 2018 OP
"Russian bots... amplify posts that create wedges between Americans along racial or religious lines" Tom Rinaldo Mar 2018 #1

Tom Rinaldo

(22,918 posts)
1. "Russian bots... amplify posts that create wedges between Americans along racial or religious lines"
Sun Mar 25, 2018, 12:41 PM
Mar 2018

I think it is safe to say they don't confine themselves to racial and religious lines.

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