Lethbridge Herald

RUSSIAN troll farm

NOTORIOUS RUSSIAN TROLL FARM ALSO TOOK SWIPES AT TRUDEAU, CANADIAN OIL

- Alexander Panetta THE CANADIAN PRESS — WASHINGTON

The same Russian online troll farm that meddled in the American presidenti­al election has also taken swipes at Canadian targets, including oil infrastruc­ture and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau —

The same Russian online troll farm that meddled in the American presidenti­al election has also taken swipes at Canadian targets, including oil infrastruc­ture and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Evidence is embedded in data made publicly available through investigat­ions in the United States, where congressio­nal probes have been examining Russian informatio­n campaigns following the 2016 presidenti­al election.

One report from a Republican-led committee in the House of Representa­tives released this month said the St. Petersburg troll factory, members of which now face criminal charges in the U.S., posted online about energy roughly half as often as it did about American presidenti­al politics.

The committee’s review of more than 4,000 accounts linked to the now-notorious Internet Research Agency finds more than 9,000 posts on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram about pipelines and fracking, including an unspecifie­d number about the Canada-U.S. Keystone XL pipeline.

The committee would not release the raw data allowing a search for all Canada-specific messages. But The Canadian Press did find a few dozen anti-Keystone tweets in an unrelated data set, provided by Twitter to a U.S. congressio­nal committee looking into meddling in the 2016 election.

They included retweets of news headlines, references to oil spills, and links to blog posts like one titled: “Uh oh! Progressiv­e fans of Justin Trudeau might be in for MAJOR buzzkill (Hint: Keystone, Trump, OMG!)”

That same file included dozens of messages about Trudeau, mostly retweets, frequently related to the prime minister’s views on refugees, Muslims, or his much-criticized flattery of deceased Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

Messages about Canada represente­d a minuscule percentage of the overall volume of data released by U.S. lawmakers. To put it into perspectiv­e, there were more than 203,000 tweets in the data provided by Twitter for the congressio­nal 2016 election probe, and less than 150 mentioned Trudeau or Keystone XL.

But things like Canadian oil are a natural target, said one analyst on Russian informatio­n campaigns.

“I wouldn’t be surprised (if they’re going after Canadian oil),” said Daniel Fried, a former U.S. State Department official who coordinate­d sanctions policy for the U.S. government until 2017.

“You will find the Russians getting into all kinds of issues, deliberate­ly stirring up debate, and trying to spin it in a malicious fashion .... Of course it is ironic the Russians would use environmen­tal arguments, for which they have no patience at home, to hurt energy infrastruc­ture abroad.”

Fried is the co-author of another justreleas­ed report in Washington.

His report was funded by NATO, the government­s of the U.K. and Sweden, and released by the Atlantic Council think tank under the title, “Democratic Defense Against Disinforma­tion.”

It recommends solutions for modern informatio­n warfare, including how best to combat the thousands of accounts impersonat­ing westerners to spread rumours, falsehoods, and facts chosen to hit specific targets.

It’s time for the democratic world to stop marvelling at the new phenomenon of online disinforma­tion and start co-operating on solutions, he said.

The report begins by defining three types of online warfare:

• Propaganda. These are real news stories, selected to advance pro-Russian, anti-Western narratives. The report lists media outlets Russia Today and Sputnik as examples. Russia calls this an unfair slur, describing those outlets as government-owned, like the BBC and CBC. This report rejects that comparison: “They are arms of the Russian state no more independen­t than Pravda was during the Soviet period.”

• Social-media infiltrati­on. Examples include anonymous accounts that spread 2016 disinforma­tion about a Democrat-run pedophilia ring in a pizzeria, suggested Hillary Clinton was near death and urged minorities not to vote. The U.S. has charged 13 Russians in connection with those campaigns.

• Hacking. Online break-and-enters, where someone’s emails are stolen and distribute­d. It happened to Democrats in 2016, and to France’s Emmanuel Macron, just before France’s last election. A central question of the U.S. Mueller probe is who did the hacking in 2016, and who co-ordinated the release of stolen emails.

The paper’s central recommenda­tion is that the West hew to its own stated democratic ideals — instead of fighting fire with fire, to douse it with what the report authors call the firehose of facts.

“Truth through transparen­cy,” is how Fried describes it.

“If Canada believes that the debate about energy infrastruc­ture is being skewed by Russian bots, or the St. Petersburg troll farm ... the best way to combat that is to expose it.”

The report urges three groups to get involved.

It calls on government­s to label outlets like Russia Today, which is now registered as a foreign agent in the U.S. It urges government­s to create a point of contact for social-media companies, who currently don’t know where to discuss regulatory issues. And it suggests new transparen­cy laws about who is paying for an online ad.

The paper also recommends funding for research on foreign trolling, and for botmonitor­ing groups.

Third is the private sector: stories from Russia Today should be labelled as coming from a registered foreign agent, says the paper.

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