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The role of new media
#1
Quote:One of Twitter's founders said President Trump's election shows how social media can "dumb the entire world down." Evan Williams was asked about President Trump's use of Twitter during an interview on BBC Radio 4's "Today" program, according to The Guardian. “The much bigger issue is not Donald Trump using Twitter that got him elected, even if he says so," Williams said. "It is the quality of the information we consume that is reinforcing dangerous beliefs and isolating people and limiting people’s open-mindedness and respect for truth.” Williams said there is a media ecosystem that "is supported and thrives on attention."
Twitter founder: Trump election shows social media helping to 'dumb the entire world down' | TheHill
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#2
Quote:Facebook helped propel Donald Trump to the presidency with fake Russian accounts and ads from the country that were pro-Trump, undermined the Clinton campaignstoked arguments about social issues, and shared fake news stories. The platform also embedded Republican employees with the Trump campaign to assist with ad technology, according to a new 60 Minutes interview with the campaign’s digital media director. A new interview with the campaign's digital director reveals how the campaign got help straight from Facebook. Facebook’s response? Hire a right-wing outlet to fact check news stories.
Facebook looks to partner with right-wing outlet to fact check stories – ThinkProgress
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#3
Quote:President Trump’s digital campaign guru in a new interview on Sunday said his team's efforts to reach voters through Facebook is a key reason why Trump, instead of his opponent Hillary Clinton, is sitting in the Oval Office. "I understood early that Facebook was how Donald Trump was going to win. Twitter is how he talked to the people, Facebook was going to be how he won," Brad Parscale, the former digital director for Trump's campaign, said in a "60 Minutes" interview.
Trump’s digital campaign chief says Facebook was why president won | TheHill
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#4
A Terrifying summary, from Foreign Policy:


The United States has already lost a major battle in the information war

[Image: foreign-policy.jpg] The tank was a British invention, built to penetrate German trenches during World War I. But it was the Germans who, during the interwar period, figured out how to most effectively utilize the tank, in coordination with aircraft and infantry, for offensive operations. Thus was born the blitzkrieg (“lightning war”) that allowed the Germans to overrun much of Europe in 1939-1940. The British and the French, who still had more and better tanks, were helpless to resist the onslaught.

Something similar seems to have happened with social media networks. All of the leading social media platforms — Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, Reddit, Google — are American inventions. Yet the Russians weaponized them to wage political war.

The 2016 U.S. presidential election was as shocking, in its own way, as the fall of France in May 1940. The complacent French thought they were secure behind the Maginot Line until the German panzers penetrated the supposedly impenetrable Ardennes Forest. Likewise the complacent Hillary Clinton campaign thought it was secure because of its hordes of cash, its extensive on-the-ground operation, and the sheer awfulness of its opponent. Surprise! The Russians stole Democratic Party emails and, acting through cutouts like WikiLeaks, leaked the most damaging tidbits. Then social media did the rest. And lo and behold on Nov. 8, 2016, the unthinkable occurred: Donald Trump was elected president of the United States.

The broad outlines of this story have been known for a while — at least since the release at the beginning of this year of an intelligence community assessment of the Russian influence operation — but in recent weeks we have been learning much more about how the Russian intelligence services manipulated social media to help Trump and undermine Clinton.

What we don’t know yet is whether there was coordination between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin, but there is good reason to suspect that there was. It’s not just that Donald Trump Jr. was so eager for dirt on Clinton when it was offered by Moscow’s emissaries. And it’s not just that the Trump campaign was run for months by Paul Manafort, who has long been on the payroll of pro-Vladimir Putin oligarchs and tried to trade on his position to curry favor with one of his primary Russian patrons. And it’s not just that the Trump campaign had extensive contacts with the Kremlin.

There is also the CNN report that Russian-linked ads on Facebook targeted voters in Michigan and Wisconsin, both states that Trump carried by less than 1 percent and that were essential to his Electoral College victory. The Russians obviously have the expertise to steal emails, but where did they acquire the knowledge to so expertly target the American electorate? It strains credulity to imagine that it was just a coincidence that the Trump campaign was targeting those two states.
[img=620x0]http://static4.businessinsider.com/image/59e10561d4e92020008b5151-2400/ap16314308959406.jpg[/img]
Trump partisans point out that the overall level of Russian spending on campaign ads was relatively low. Google claims to have found roughly $60,000 in ads; Facebook, $100,000; and Twitter, $270,000 — rounding errors compared with the nearly $1.9 billion spent collectively by the Clinton and Trump campaigns. But this ignores how close the election was: It was decided by fewer than 100,000 votes in three states. It would not have taken much to sway the outcome. So it is pretty significant that Facebook now says, according to CNN, “an estimated 10 million people in the U.S. saw at least one of the 3,000 political ads it says were bought by accounts linked to the Russian government.” (Many experts believe that Facebook’s estimate is low and that as many as 70 million people saw those ads.)

Those Facebook ads alone had the potential to tilt the election outcome — and they were only one small part of a much larger Russian effort whose full contours are still not known today. The employees of a notorious “troll farm” in St. Petersburg pretended to be American — or British or French or German or whatever — as they created online content to influence the social media of the target country. This doesn’t require any ad buying, and it happens almost invisibly because the trolls hide behind elaborate aliases.

There were, for example, the two supposed African-American bloggers known as Williams and Kalvin who posted videos on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube attacking the Clintons (“serial killers who are going to rape the whole nation”), charging that Clinton’s campaign was “fund[ed] by the Muslim” and that she was an “old racist bitch,” and claiming that Trump couldn’t be racist because “any businessman cannot be a racist because when you are a racist, then your business is going down.” According to the Daily Beast, “Williams and Kalvin’s content was pulled from Facebook in August after it was identified as a Russian government-backed propaganda account.”

Not content to impersonate African-Americans, the Russian trolls also pretended to be American Muslims.They took on the digital identity of a real group called United Muslims of America and, according to the Daily Beast, “pushed memes that claimed Hillary Clinton admitted the U.S. ‘created, funded and armed’ al-Qaeda and the so-called Islamic State; claimed that John McCain was ISIS’ true founder; whitewashed blood-drenched dictator Moammar Gadhafi and praised him for not having a ‘Rothschild-owned central bank’; and falsely alleged Osama bin Laden was a ‘CIA agent.’”

At the same time that they were attempting to foment Muslim discontent in America, the opportunistic Russians were also pandering to anti-Muslim nativists — including organizing an anti-Muslim rally in Idaho in 2016. The Russians were behind websites such as “Being Patriotic” and “Secured Borders,” which often promoted “fake news” such as the claim that “Michigan allows Muslim immigrants to collect welfare checks and other benefits for four wives.”

The Russians’ operating principle is simple: Do whatever it takes to undermine America. Spread discord. Sow doubts. Spark conflict. Helping elect Trump — whose unfitness for office is now publicly acknowledged by a leading senator of his own party — is the centerpiece of that strategy. Sure, Trump hasn’t lifted sanctions on Russia (Congress has tied his hands), but the chaos and ineptitude of his administration redound to the advantage of America’s adversaries.

The Russian success in manipulating the 2016 election is only encouraging them to continue their information war. The German Marshall Fund of the United States has created a website to track the Kremlin’s disinformation. It shows that the Russians put their own anti-American spin on the news of the day, whether the Las Vegas shooting or the hurricane aftermath in Puerto Rico. Sen. James Lankford, who sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee, notes that the Russians lately have been pushing hashtags such as #TakeaKnee and #BoycottNFL to exploit the Trump-fueled controversy over football players kneeling during the national anthem.

This is scary stuff. The United States, as a democratic society, is uniquely vulnerable to this kind of manipulation — all the more so when the proliferation of social media makes it so easy to aim bespoke lies at any audience that you want to influence. It’s tempting to conclude that the United States needs to give tyrants such as Putin a taste of their own medicine, but that won’t work because autocracies such as those in Moscow and Beijing censor the internet. The only thing the United States can do is play defense, by forcing social media companies to become much more transparent about who is conveying what messages.

Facebook, Twitter, Google, and all the rest have hardly been forthcoming. It has taken a congressional investigation to get them to come clean about what they know about Russian influence operations, and there may well be more that that they haven’t revealed yet. Given the vast and growing influence of these corporations — Facebook alone reaches more than 2 billion of the world’s 7 billion people — their lack of accountability can no longer be tolerated. Either they must do a better job of policing themselves or Washington needs to step in. We’ve already lost a major battle in the information war. We can’t survive as a liberal democratic superpower if we lose the whole war.
Read the original article on Foreign Policy. "Real World. Real Time." Follow Foreign Policy on Facebook. Subscribe to Foreign Policy here. Copyright 2017. Follow Foreign Policy on Twitter.
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#5
Quote:Going viral used to be harmless. Chewbacca Mom got more than 162 million views on Facebook while laughing hysterically for four minutes and ended up on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show." The Mannequin Challenge was a goofy trend that got friends collaborating on elaborately staged videos. Tay Zonday sang his "Chocolate Rain" ballad on YouTube in 2007 and became an internet sensation.

But over the last few years, trolls learned how to turn trending moments into a tool for spreading misinformation. The same way that videos of cute cats spread online, trolls have figured out how to tap into what makes people want to share on social media and use it to popularize outrage and fake news. The fallout is more serious than a spot on a daytime talk show -- it's widely believed that the rapid spread of fake news and increasingly divisive environment online swayed the 2016 US presidential election. Now Facebook and Twitter face criticism that they've lost control of their platforms as algorithms promote fake news as "trending topics."

For Russia especially, viral content has become a powerful weapon. In September, Twitter discovered 201 Russian-linked accounts dedicated to spreading fake outrage, while Facebook found about 500 accounts doing the same. These accounts pretended to be gun rights advocates and Black Lives Matter activists, taking up both sides of debates, with the primary goal to make noise. All together, the fake accounts on Facebook had been seen more than 10 million times, and that was just for sponsored content.
How Russian trolls lie their way to top of Facebook, Twitter - CNET
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#6
Quote:Ever since Facebook acknowledged that Russian operatives meddled in last year's presidential election by targeting ads to narrow interest groups based on divisive issues like race and immigration, the social network has promised to build in safeguards to ensure that postings on sensitive issues receive human scrutiny.  The safeguards are meant to help screen out ads making use of overtly hateful categories like "Jew Haters," which was tested by ProPublica as a real filter for a hypothetical advertiser that made it past computer screening. A scan for other, albeit less inflammatory filters, shows that the social network still has its work cut out for it — around the world.

Consider: As of Monday, a prospective advertiser could type the keywords "Azad Kashmir" or "Free Kashmir" in the "Detailed Targeting" section of Facebook's ad targeting system and deliver ads to a potential audience of over 3.2 million people between the ages of 18 and 65-plus, respectively, across India and Pakistan, according to a test by Business Insider. Kashmir is the hotly disputed territory between the two countries. Similarly, ads targeting the words "Free Palestine" revealed the potential to reach over 1.8 million users in 21 different Arab countries, barring Syria, and Assemblea Nacional Catalana (of the Catalan National Assembly, which is leading the movement for Catalonia to secede from Spain) could reach 220,000 people. A structural, fundamentally global problem
Facebook's ad targeting allows for global political hot buttons - Business Insider
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#7
Quote:Between the staggering new numbers on total social media impact and revelations on the ever-larger reach of on-the-ground protests, it’s become apparent that the more we learn about the fake social media accounts run out of Russia, the greater their impact appears. As such, it’s become increasingly clear that these fake accounts didn’t remain relegated solely to the social media sphere — and that they managed to spread due not only to unwitting activists, but also due to outlets and journalists, as ThinkProgress has detailed, who managed to include these accounts in stories without realizing they were created by trolls in St. Petersburg.
A closer look at how fake Russian accounts reached into US media – ThinkProgress
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#8
While not US politics, but the Russians are far from alone to deploy troll factories..

Quote:For several months in 2017 Alex, whose name has been changed, alleges he was one of more than 20 people inside a secretive cyber army that pumped out messages from fake social media accounts to support then Jakarta governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, known as “Ahok”, as he fought for re-election. “They told us you should have five Facebook accounts, five Twitter accounts and one Instagram,” he told the Guardian. “And they told us to keep it secret. They said it was ‘war time’ and we had to guard the battleground and not tell anyone about where we worked.” The Jakarta election – which saw the incumbent Ahok, a Chinese Christian, compete against the former president’s son Agus Yudhoyono, and the former education minister, Anies Baswedan – churned up ugly religious and racial divisions. It culminated in mass Islamic rallies and allegations that religion was being used for political gain. Demonstrators called for Ahok to be jailed on contentious blasphemy charges. The rallies were heavily promoted by an opaque online movement known as the Muslim Cyber Army, or the MCA, which employed hundreds of fake and anonymous accounts to spread racist and hardline Islamic content designed to turn Muslim voters against Ahok. Alex says his team was employed to counter the deluge of anti-Ahok sentiment, including hashtags that critiqued opposition candidates, or ridiculed their Islamic allies.
'I felt disgusted': inside Indonesia's fake Twitter account factories | World news | The Guardian

And Indonesia is hardly alone, this stuff is spreading like wildfire, with deadly consequences (like the fake accusations of child abduction in India, which have already cost several people gruesome deaths).
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#9
Quote:To an audience of more than two million, Alex Jones uses Facebook to push some of the most dangerous conspiracy theories in American discourse. His InfoWars outlet - you can't in good faith call it news - has called the Sandy Hook massacre a hoax (it wasn't). It said Parkland survivors were crisis actors (they weren't). It claimed a pizza restaurant in Washington DC was the headquarters of a paedophilia ring (it wasn't). Democrats, InfoWars told viewers on Independence Day, are about to declare civil war (they're not). On Tuesday, Facebook was asked by Congress why it continued to allow InfoWars to use its platform. "If they posted sufficient content that it violated our threshold, the page would come down," said Monika Bickert, Facebook's head of policy. "That threshold varies depending on the severity of different types of violations." Earlier in the hearing Ms Bickert said Facebook had a three-strikes policy for inappropriate behaviour. You simply must wonder what it would take for Facebook to consider something a strike against InfoWars. Ms Bickert wouldn't be drawn on anymore details of the "threshold".
Hearing exposes Facebook’s toothless 'fake news' policy - BBC News
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#10
This is very depressing..

Quote:The fictional news stories pop up on Facebook faster than Paterno Esmaquel II and his co-workers can stamp them outRodrigo Duterte, the president of the Philippines, debated a Catholic bishop over using violence to stop illegal drugs — and won. Pope Francis called Mr. Duterte “a blessing.” Prince Harry and his new wife, Meghan Markle, praised him, too. None were true.

False news is so established and severe in the Philippines that one Facebook executive calls it “patient zero” in the global misinformation epidemic. To fight back in this country, the Silicon Valley social media giant has turned to Mr. Esmaquel and others who work for Rappler, an online news start-up with experience tackling fake stories on Facebook. While Rappler’s fact checkers work closely with Facebook to investigate and report their findings, they believe the company could do much more

“It’s frustrating,” said Marguerite de Leon, 32, a Rappler employee who receives dozens of tips each day about false stories from readers. “We’re cleaning up Facebook’s mess.” On the front lines in the war over misinformation, Rappler is overmatched and outgunned — and that could be a worrying indicator of Facebook’s effort to curb the global problem by tapping fact-checking organizations around the world. Civil society groups have complained that Facebook’s support is weak. Others have said the company doesn’t offer enough transparency to tell what works and what doesn’t..
Soldiers in Facebook’s War on Fake News Are Feeling Overrun - The New York Times
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