"Analysts tracking Russian influence operations find a feedback loop between Kremlin propaganda and far-right memes."
"Angee Dixson joined Twitter on Aug. 8 and immediately began posting furiously — about 90 times a day. A self-described American Christian conservative, Dixson defended President Donald Trump’s response to the unrest in Charlottesville, criticized the removal of Confederate monuments and posted pictures purporting to show violence by left-wing counterprotesters.
“Dems
and Media Continue to IGNORE BLM and Antifa Violence in Charlottesville,” she wrote above a picture of masked
demonstrators labeled “DEMOCRAT TERROR.”
But
Dixson appears to have been a fake, according to an analysis by Ben Nimmo and
Donara Barojan of the Digital Forensic Research Lab at the Atlantic Council
think tank. The account has been shut
down. Dixson’s profile picture was stolen from a young Instagram celebrity
(a German model rumored to have dated Leonardo DiCaprio). Dixson used a URL
shortener that is a tell for the sort of computer program that automatically
churns out high volumes of social media posts whose authorship is frequently
disguised. And one of her tweets attacked Sen. John McCain for his alleged
support of Ukrainian neo-Nazis, echoing language in tweets from Russian outlets
RT and Sputnik.
The
same social media networks that spread Russian propaganda during the 2016
election have been busily amplifying right-wing extremism surrounding the
recent violence in Charlottesville, according to researchers who monitor the
activity. It’s impossible to tell how much of the traffic originates from
Russia or from mercenary sources. But there were hordes of automated bots
generating Twitter posts and much more last week to help make right-wing
conspiracy theories and rallying cries about Charlottesville go viral.
A sample of 600 Twitter accounts
linked to Russian influence operations have been promoting hashtags for
Charlottesville such as “antifa,” a term for activists on the far left; and
“alt-left,” a term Trump used, which was interpreted by many as suggesting an
equivalence between liberal demonstrators and white nationalists in the
so-called alt-right.
The
sample includes accounts that are openly pro-Russian like state-controlled
outlets RT and Sputnik, which a joint U.S. intelligence assessment concluded
are “part of Russia’s state-run propaganda machine.” The sample also includes
those, like “Angee Dixson’s,” that seem to be written by typical Americans. And
it follows automated bots that help make messages go viral and even users
around the world who spread the Kremlin’s messages whether or not they mean to
support Russia. The network is tracked by four researchers working with the
Alliance for Securing Democracy, a project of the German Marshall Fund that
seeks to expose efforts to undermine Western democracy."
Read complete article https://www.propublica.org/article/pro-russian-bots-take-up-the-right-wing-cause-after-charlottesville
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