Russia seen adopting new tactics in U.S.
election interference efforts
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[November 06, 2018]
By Joseph Menn
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Russian agents believed to be connected to the
government have been active in spreading divisive content and promoting
extreme themes ahead of Tuesday's U.S. mid-term elections, but they are
working hard to cover their tracks, according to government
investigators, academics and security firms.
Researchers studying the spread of disinformation on Facebook, Twitter,
Reddit and other platforms say the new, subtler tactics have allowed
most of the so-called information operations campaigns to survive purges
by the big social media companies and avoid government scrutiny.
"The Russians are definitely not sitting this one out,” said Graham
Brookie, director of the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research
Lab. “They have adapted over time to increased (U.S.) focus on influence
operations."
U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies say Russia used
disinformation and other tactics to support President Donald Trump's
2016 campaign.
The Russian government has rejected allegations of election
interference. On Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman
declined to comment on allegations of further meddling in the run-up to
the mid-term elections.
"We cannot react to some abstract cybersecurity analysts because we do
not know who they are and whether they understand anything about
cybersecurity," Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
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He said Moscow expected no significant improvement to its strained ties
with Washington after the vote.
One clear sign of a continued Russian commitment to disrupting American
political life came out in charges unsealed last month against a Russian
woman who serves as an accountant at a St. Petersburg company known as
the Internet Research Agency.
After spending $12 million on a project to influence the U.S. election
through social media in 2016, the company budgeted $12.2 million for
last year and then proposed spending $10 million in just the first half
of 2018, court filings showed.
The indictment said the Internet Research Agency used fake social media
accounts to post on both sides of politically charged issues including
race, gun control and immigration. The instructions were detailed, down
to how to mock particular politicians during a specific news cycle.
If the goals of spreading divisive content have remained the same, the
methods have evolved in multiple ways, researchers say. For one, there
has been less reliance on pure fiction. People have been sensitized to
look for completely false stories, and Facebook has been using outside
fact-checkers to at least slow their spread on its pages.
“We’ve done a lot research on fake news and people are getting better at
figuring out what it is, so it's become less effective as a tactic,”
said Priscilla Moriuchi, a former National Security Agency official who
is now a threat analyst at the cybersecurity firm Recorded Future threat
manager.
Instead, Russian accounts have been amplifying stories and internet
"memes" that initially came from the U.S. far left or far right. Such
postings seem more authentic, are harder to identify as foreign, and are
easier to produce than made-up stories.
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A cyclist passes by a sign directing voters to a polling station in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. November 4, 2018. REUTERS/Nick Oxford
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Renee DiResta, director of research at security company New
Knowledge, said her company had compiled a list of suspected Russian
accounts on Facebook and Twitter that were similar to those
suspended after the 2016 campaign.
Some of them seized on the Brett Kavanaugh nomination to the Supreme
Court to rally conservatives, while others used memes from the
leftist Occupy Democrats. Some operators of the accounts in the
collection established themselves as far-right pundits and had
accounts on Gab, the social network favored by the far right.
Brookie said that while the Russian accounts might jump on a hot
topic, the payoff would often come by throwing in related issues.
But that need not be necessary when the main topic is divisive
enough. Take the idea of “Blexit,” a call for black Americans to
exit the Democratic Party. The Daily Beast said it captured 250,000
tweets with the Blexit hashtag during a 15-hour burst last week and
found that 40,000 of them came from handles that had previously
participated in Russian information campaigns.
Though jumping on existing bandwagons is easier than what Russia did
in 2016, other new tactics have been more complex.
In the October indictment and an earlier operation uncovered by
Facebook, records showed that the instigators used Facebook's
Messenger service to try to get others to buy advertisements for
them and to recruit American radicals to promote real-world
protests.
Those moves allowed the Russians to evade strengthened detection
systems and blend in with the crowd.
“They are baiting Americans to drive more polarizing and vitriolic
content,” Brookie said. “Any given solution needs to focus on basing
our politics on facts, first and foremost, and to focus on what
holds our country closer together.”
(Reporting by Joseph Menn in San Francisco; Additional reporting by
Katya Golubkova in Moscow; Editing by Jonathan Weber, Neil Fullick,
Richard Balmforth)
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