Armies
of Cyber-Troops Manipulating Public Opinion
By
TruePublica
July
21, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The Computational Propaganda Research Project
(COMPROP) investigates the interaction of
algorithms, automation and politics. This work
includes analysis of how tools like social media
bots are used to manipulate public opinion by
amplifying or repressing political content,
disinformation, hate speech, junk or fake news.
In their most recent
report COMPROP
have identified how organisations, often with
public money, have created a system to help ‘define
and manage what is in the best interest of the
public.’
COMPROP
have compared such organisations across 28
countries, created an inventory system and
logged the kinds of messages, valences (positive
or negative messaging) and communication
strategies used. They have also catalogued
organisational forms and evaluated their
capacities in terms of budgets and staffing.
This
article focuses on the use of cyber-troops.
Cyber-troops are
identified as government, military or
political party teams committed to
manipulating public opinion over social
media. Its findings include the use of cyber
troops that are now a pervasive and global
phenomenon. Many different countries employ
significant numbers of people and resources
to manage and manipulate public opinion
online, sometimes targeting domestic
audiences and sometimes targeting foreign
publics.
The
basic finding include:
-
The earliest reports of organised social
media manipulation emerged in 2010, and by
2017 there are details on such organisations
in 28 countries, including the US and UK.
-
Looking across the 28 countries, every
authoritarian regime has social media
campaigns targeting their own populations,
while only a few of them target foreign
publics. In contrast, almost every democracy
in this sample has organised social media
campaigns that target foreign publics, while
political-party-supported campaigns target
domestic voters.
-
Authoritarian regimes are not the only or
even the best at organised social media
manipulation. The earliest reports of
government involvement in nudging public
opinion involve democracies, and new
innovations in political communication
technologies often come from political
parties and arise during high-profile
elections.
-
Over time, the primary mode for organising
cyber troops has gone from involving
military units that experiment with
manipulating public opinion over social
media networks to strategic communication
firms that take contracts from governments
for social media campaigns.
The
report mentions that “In
January 2015, the British Army
announced that
its 77th Brigade would “focus on non‐lethal
psychological operations using social networks
like Facebook and Twitter to fight enemies by
gaining control of the narrative in the
information age”. The primary task of this unit
is to shape public behaviour through the use of
“dynamic narratives” to combat the political
propaganda disseminated by terrorist
organisations. The United Kingdom is not alone
in allocating troops and funding for influencing
online political discourse. Instead, this is
part of a larger phenomenon whereby governments
are turning to Internet platforms to exert
influence over information flows and
communication channels to shape public opinion.”
What is
of concern in the report is that Cyber troops
use a variety of strategies, tools and
techniques for social media manipulation.
Generally speaking, teams have an overarching
communications strategy that involves creating
official government applications, websites or
platforms for disseminating content; using
accounts—either real, fake or automated—to
interact with users on social media; or creating
substantive content such as images, videos or
blog posts. These teams engage in sending
pro‐government, positive or nationalistic
messages when engaging with the public online.
Other teams will harass, troll or threaten users
who express dissenting positions.
Other,
more popular forms of individual targeting
involves various forms of harassment. This
generally involves verbal abuse, hate speech,
discrimination and/or trolling against the
values, beliefs or identity of a user or a group
of users online. Of course, some governments
will use this type of harassment during
important political events, namely, elections.
In
addition to official government accounts, many
cyber troop teams run fake accounts to mask
their identity and interests. This phenomenon
has sometimes been referred to as “astroturfing”,
whereby the identity of a sponsor or
organisation is made to appear as grassroots
activism (Howard, 2003). In many cases, these
fake accounts are “bots”—or bits of code
designed to interact with and mimic human users.
According to media reports, bots have been
deployed by government actors in Argentina (Rueda,
2012), Azerbaijan (Geybulla, 2016), Iran (BBC
News, 2016), Mexico (O’Carrol, 2017), the
Philippines (Williams S, 2017), Russia (Duncan,
2016), South Korea (Sang‐Hun, 2013), Syria
(York, 2011), Turkey (Shearlaw, 2016) and
Venezuela (VOA News, 2015).
These bots are often used
to flood social media networks with spam and
fake news. They can also amplify marginal
voices and ideas by inflating the number of
likes, shares and retweets they receive,
creating an artificial sense of popularity,
momentum or relevance.
Some
cyber troop teams create content to spread
certain political messages. This content
creation amounts to more than just a comment on
a blog or social media feed, but instead
includes the creation of content such as blog
posts, YouTube videos, fake news stories,
pictures or memes that help promote the
government’s political agenda. In the United
Kingdom, cyber troops have been known to create
and upload YouTube videos that “contain
persuasive messages” under online aliases (Benedictus,
2016).
Government‐based cyber troops are public
servants tasked with influencing public opinion.
These individuals are directly employed by the
state as civil servants, and often form a small
part of a larger government administration. The
report finds that “cyber troops can be found
across a variety of government ministries and
functions.” GCHQ is one such department.
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The
Australian Coalition Party used social media
during its 2013 campaign to manipulate the
public by using fake accounts to artificially
inflate the number of followers, likes, shares
or retweets a candidate receives, creating a
false sense of popularity.
In
Israel, the government actively works with
student volunteers from Jewish organisations or
other pro Israel groups around the world (Stern
Hoffman, 2013). In many cases these
top-performing volunteers awarded scholarships
for their work (Stern‐Hoffman, 2013).
The
report concludes:
“There is no doubt that
individual social media users can spread
hate speech, troll other users, or set up
automated political communication campaigns.
Unfortunately, this is also an organised
phenomenon, with major governments and
political parties dedicating significant
resources towards the use of social media
for public opinion manipulation.”
“I don’t think people realise how
much governments are using these tools to reach
them. It’s a lot more hidden,” Samantha
Bradshaw, the report’s lead author told Bloomberg,
noting the prominence of social media
manipulation among democratic governments.
“They are using the same tools
and techniques as the authoritarian regimes,” Bradshaw
said. “Maybe the
motivations are different, but it’s hard to tell
without the transparency.”
In the meantime, it should not be forgotten that
whilst on the one hand governments around the
world, including Britain are actively engaging
in online public manipulation, Theresa May, the
prime minister, has already
asked
governments to unite to regulate what tech
companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter
allow to be posted on their networks. The EU has
already clamped down with calls that they are
effectively shutting down free speech as apposed
to curtailing hate speech, whilst engaging in
exactly that – hate speech.
Whilst
you might expect some governments around the
world such as Azerbaijan, China, Israel and
North Korea to be engaging cyber-troops to
manipulate pubic opinion, you would not expect
other western democracies such as the USA, UK or
Germany to be doing so. But then again, these
very same countries have built massive 360
degree mass surveillance systems without any
public debate at all.
This article was first published by
TruePublica
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.