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Professional Russian Trolling Exposed

An anonymous reader writes: Today the New York Times published a stunning exposé revealing the strategies used by one of the Web's greatest enemies: professional, government-backed "internet trolls." These well-paid agent provocateurs are dedicated to destroying the value of the Internet as an organizing and political tool. The trolling attacks described within are mind-boggling -- they sound like the basis of a Neal Stephenson novel as much as they do real life -- but they all rely on the usual, inevitable suspects of imperfect security and human credulity.

14 of 276 comments (clear)

  1. And? by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is anybody pretending that corporations and politicians aren't already effectively doing the same thing?

    Only they pretty it up with foundations and think tanks who put out position papers to benefit the talking points of the people paying for them.

    Propaganda comes in many forms. And from many sources.

    And even some of the people who will be hand-wringing about this propaganda will be endorsing some other stuff.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  2. It's very real by Virtucon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Look at any site, twitter, instagram, facebook, reddit. If you post something about say MH17 and the information about the Russians being involved, all of a sudden the trolls come out about Ukrainian aggression, whores in Kiev etc. As the TFA indicates, this can create panic considering how hooked people are on Social Media but it'll also be more than anything else, the death of anonymity on the Web. Why? because people on Social Media sites will demand it because of the trolling activities and having to filter through a bunch of propaganda and targeted misdirection.

    --
    Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    1. Re:It's very real by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      1. The separatists captured an Ukrainian BUK when they took over an Ukrainian air base
      2. A BUK has in fact been seen and photographed travelling in the separatist controlled region of the Ukraine.
      3. According to witness reports, a BUK system was moved into Russia the night after the incident
      4. Immediately after the incident, separatists boasted on the Internet they shot down an Ukrainian Antonov
      5. Bellingcat analysis of Russian provided satellite imagery intending to prove Ukraininan involvement have been proven to be fakes

      Meanwhile Russian media has raised all kinds of crazy conspiracy theories trying to obfuscate the incident:
      - A mysterious spanish air controller came out and admitted an Ukrainian fighter plane shot the aircraft down
      - The pilot of the machine was an Ukrainian committing suicide to frame the separatists
      - MH17 was full of corpses to begin with, pointing towards a fucking batshit crazy CIA operation
      - It was an Ukrainian Sukoi
      - It was an Ukrainian MIG
      - It was an Ukrainian BUK
      - It was an attempted assassination attempt on Putin
      - There was an UFO in the vicinity (thanks for that one)

      Seriously man...

  3. Re:America next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    You left Slashdot off that list.

  4. You're Talking About a Different Scale by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's just about time to drag the American organized political trolling on sites like reddit, twitter, and tumblr into the open too, right?

    Well, astroturfing is no new tactic but ... I think what this article deals with is scale. 400 clearly skilled (bilingual at the least) individuals running multiple catfish personalities online day in and day out ... the whole thing on a budget of $400k a month? That level and size is probably unparalleled by ... say, Digg's conservative idiots.

    You have one entity orchestrating the 12 hours a day work of 400 individuals on topics that are pro-Russian and tangentially pro-Russian. They are sophisticated enough to "hit play" at a certain time to unfold a natural disaster or assassination or anything to destabilize/confuse a region and they do so over many accounts on multiple social media platforms. They create video, screenshots, websites, etc. And they use proxies and sufficiently sophisticated means to appear to be disjoint at first glance.

    They appear to have run an exercise on a rubber plant explosion in Louisiana for no other discernible purpose than to test out their new super powers or demonstrate their abilities to their customers/leaders.

    Frankly put, I'm unaware of "American organized political trolling" that rivals this. This is paid. This is tightly controlled. This is prepared. This is unified. American organized political trolling is just a run-of-the-mill monkey shitfight with the occasional Koch Bros/Soros website (usually easily sourceable) thrown in.

    Now if you can point me to a faked ISIS attack on American soil right before an election that was done by some political group stateside, I'd be interested to hear about it.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:You're Talking About a Different Scale by fustakrakich · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Frankly put, I'm unaware of "American organized political trolling" that rivals this.

      Americans are quick to believe the Official Narrative, no matter how absurd. Mass media is the professional 'troll' that gets people to fight each here.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    2. Re:You're Talking About a Different Scale by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Frankly put, I'm unaware of "American organized political trolling" that rivals this.

      Americans are quick to believe the Official Narrative, no matter how absurd. Mass media is the professional 'troll' that gets people to fight each here.

      Again, you're conflating two things that are significant enough that I don't see a simple one-to-one comparison here.

      The clear difference here is that the trolls in the article are a nebulous entity whereas the media trolls are not. I know to laugh at Glenn Beck and Katie Couric. I know who they are. I recognize their blubbering stupid talking heads. They're a trainwreck of lies and half truths. On the other hand, you can't stop google from returning search results that confirm what you're looking for. When it's a "trending hastag" on Twitter, you can't figure out if it's legit or not. How do I know that podonski432 on Twitter is the same individual on Youtube named ashirefort posting videos of an explosion is the same person retweeting podonski432 and adding ashirefort's video to their tweet?

      Mass media doesn't employ subterfuge and I sure as hell can stop reading the New York Post & Washington Times & CNSNews & Huffington Post and all that other drivel. I can't, however, identify easily that this account on Twitter is just the new troll account that tricked me last time.

      You do know that it's news if the New York Times is caught lying or spreading known falsities, right? I watched Jon Stewart hold a "reporters" feet to the WMD fire on one of his recent episodes. There's no self-policing mechanism like that among trolls.

      --
      My work here is dung.
    3. Re: You're Talking About a Different Scale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      bingo. the trolls of america are fox, cnn, nyt, bbc, ard, zdf, faz, zeit,the economist and the like.

      they enabled the iraq war and isis. they enable saudi terror. they badmouth iran. they spread nuclear horror stories for the benefit of big oil and big war.

      nuclear could threaten oil extraction business, ya know.

      also they did false flag terror attacks in italy and then said it was commies.

      they spread the idea of fucking as many people as possible, never mind stds.

      a bunch of wicked evil, this world.

    4. Re:You're Talking About a Different Scale by fustakrakich · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It seems like whenever an organization DOES try an astroturfing campaign ("Citizens for Enhanced Comcast Monopoly") it gets spotted so quickly for what it is that it seems to achieve negative results.

      Not when it is framed as an *Exciting new customer experience at lower than low prices that only we, with our grand national infrastructure and 5 billion channels, can provide*. This is why Comcast already enjoys its monopoly it holds now.

      This stuff is all over the place. Somebody just got named. And who knows? With this Ukraine thing, there's plenty of propaganda flying in both directions. Some people on this side have a war to sell. And the fact is that our wars were sold to us by professional "trolls", precisely through mass media. Sounds pretty nefarious to me... Definitely state sponsored astroturfing.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  5. Re:America next? by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the USA has better free speech protections. therefore, nonsense on the internet has less power

    i am certain there is organized political trolling in the USA as well, by the government and by organizations with agendas, but it is less effective in the west

    countries with less free speech protection (like china and their 50 cent bullshit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5... ) will rely on this sort of organized trolling as a means of persuasion and control, domestically and internationally. more than the west, simply because the west has less need to manipulate these whisper campaigns because nonsense on the internet has less power because are exposed to it more in a free speech environment and are more resistant to it. they simply have better trained more critical minds

    the governments of authoritarian countries fear provocative opinions more, therefore they engage in this sort of nonsense more, because they view controlling people's opinions as important. their people wind of living in a walled garden of controlled opinion with less options to consider, and a state that officially endorses and pushes weak minded opinions and fear. the west simply doesn't give a fuck. the opinions and lies of random morons on the internet is exactly that, and most people can see that for what it is. you have to live in a paranoid insecure state to give much credence to inflammatory bullshit from random whispers on the internet

    in the end, it weakens these countries, because you are breeding people with weak, easily manipulated minds. people in the west simply have better and more healthy bullshit meters. simply because when you can say anything, people do

    expose a socially and psychologically normal person to 4chan for a month, and what do you get? a crackpot? no, a jaded experienced mind that can see bullshit coming from a mile away

    exposure to the kind of thinking and commentary that resembles mental illness, amongst the more rational choices of speech, gives one a more critical eye and healthy skepticism. the ability to see the difference between credible words and manipulated words

    but in countries where paranoid schizophrenic theories are actually supported and endorsed by the government's official media agencies as a means of control, you breed people to live in panic and fear. weak minds. it's a shame to weaken people's minds like this. russia, china, iran, etc., reap a side effect of their manipulations: a general population more susceptible to idiocies most westerners (not all) would easily reject, simply because westerners (even though some choose to stay within ideological bubbles and never consider other sides out of prideful ignorance, some personality types are universal, but limited) can, and do, see other sources of narrative, good or bad

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  6. Ironic that such accusations should come from NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nearly the whole corporate media in the United States might be regarded as government trolling, and the government as a wing of big business.
    Slashdot is beginning to look like an anti-Russian propaganda website these days. The Russians are small timers, compared to the kind of wall-to-wall propaganda you see in the United States. I have been there, and every time I visit, I'm pretty shocked. Compared to even the corporate media in Europe, the level of propaganda is is shocking. Sure there are problems here to. In Britain for example, around 6 individuals own over 80% of the media. This is corrupt, but at least there doesn't seem to be the level of nationalist propaganda that you see in America. Nationalist regimes like the one in Washington are dangerous. In Europe, we have direct experience of this, both from the fallout from deranged US foreign policy, and earlier this century from nazi Germany.

  7. Re:Don't forget slashdot by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, sorry, the Pauls take great positions on one or two issues and the rest of them are batshit crazy. That's a reflection of reality, not a conspiracy theory.

    That said, I might actually vote for Rand, because I think it's time for the pendulum to swing back to the other end of the spectrum for a while. Not all of the changes will be for the best, assuming he manages to make any, but we really need to take a break from the national security/world police routine.

  8. Re:America next? by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    it's a continuum. the west falls for plenty of bullshit. it's just that, on the average, the west falls for less

    every single example of the west falling for shit you just gave me, can also be shown in countries with less free speech. and they fall for *more*

    the perfect is not the enemy of the good. if you gauge all countries against an ideal perfection of a populace of everyone being perfectly rational critical minds, which does not exist and never will, then your criticisms are useless

    the west simply edges out countries with less free speech because they train more critical minds. the west is not perfect and never will be. it's just that, until countries that now have very little free speech get more, the west will simply do better than them, not perfect

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  9. Re:par for the course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The professional Russian trolls are about as subtle.

    Thing is, you don't need to be very good at trolling if you are working full time at it. You will always get the last word against people who has better things to do than to argue with paid trolls.