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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSecret Documents From Russias Election Trolls Leak
Exclusive: Secret Documents From Russias Election Trolls LeakAn online auction gone awry reveals substantial new details about how the Kremlin-backed troll farm ginned up IRL protests and targeted specific Americans to push their propaganda.
BEN COLLINS
GIDEON RESNICK
SPENCER ACKERMAN
03.01.18 9:02 PM ET
The Kremlin-backed troll farm at the center of Russias interference in the 2016 U.S. election has quietly suffered a catastrophic security breach, The Daily Beast has confirmed, in a leak that spilled new details of its operations onto obscure corners of the internet.
The Russian information exchange Joker.Buzz, which auctions off often stolen or confidential information, advertised a leak for a large cache of the Internet Research Agencys (IRA) internal documents. It includes names of Americans, activists in particular, whom the organization specifically targeted; American-based proxies used to access Reddit and the viral meme site 9Gag; and login information for troll farm accounts.
Even the advertisement for the document dump provides a trove of previously unknown information about the breadth of Russias disinformation effort in the United States, including rallies pushed by IRA social media accounts that turned violent.
While special counsel Robert Muellers recent conspiracy indictment against the IRA showed a sophisticated organization aimed at targeting U.S. voters with disinformation, the seller appears not to have understood the implications of the auction.
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The leaks show that Russian imposter accounts targeted activists for specific causes the Kremlin-backed troll farm wanted promoted. On the target list: the daughter of one of Martin Luther Kings lieutenants.
While the date of the auction could not be independently confirmed, the authenticity of the leak can. The leaked documents list screen names connected to a number of American citizens who were used as unwitting proxies by the Russians. The Daily Beast was able to track down four of those citizens, whose names have not been previously revealed. The leak contains precise dates in 2016 in which the IRA-created account Blacktivist reached out to those U.S. citizens, plus a short description of the conversations. The Daily Beast spoke to those citizens, and confirmed they interacted with the Blacktivist account in the ways described by the IRA in the document. In one case, the American even provided screenshots of his interactions with the Russian troll trying to dupe him.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/exclusive-secret-documents-from-russias-election-trolls-leak?ref=home?ref=home
Cracklin Charlie
(12,904 posts)This could be big.
poboy2
(2,078 posts)The leak shows that even as the Russian trolls were able to influence and manipulate American political discourse online, they were less equipped to keep their own secrets. While The Daily Beast does not possess anything close to a comprehensive trove of the IRAs internal operations, it is now likely that substantial amounts of the troll farms files are waiting to be discovered online.
But what The Daily Beast has seen provides a new level of texture and detail to the IRAs U.S. efforts, online and off. While the troll farms use of YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook is now well-known, the leak shows that the Internet Research Agency also operated on Reddit and had a substantial footprint on Tumblr. They documented and tracked their personalized interactions with specific, unsuspecting Americans, some of whom are named in the leaks.
Those outreach efforts display conceptual sophistication. The leaks show that IRA imposter accounts targeted activists for specific causes the Russians wanted promoted. On the target list: the daughter of one of Martin Luther Kings lieutenants.
But the leaks also provide a glimpse into the troll farms weaknesses. Some of the Americans the group contacted described receiving impersonal entreaties from unfamiliar accounts, asking for trivial aid and then declining to follow up. The Internet Research Agency might have known how to leverage social media, but they knew far less about how users authentically interact with each other on itwhich itself attracted suspicion amongst the very people the Russians were contacting.
I couldnt put my finger on it. I didnt know who they were and why they were remaining anonymous, and I didnt really see the need for it, said Craig Carson, a Rochester, New York, attorney and civil rights activist who was contacted by the farm-created account Blacktivist.
FarCenter
(19,429 posts)If you are a scammer, you don't want to deal with smart and wary marks.