Global Times

Google source: Russia advertised

Kremlin entity allegedly paid for ads on Gmail, YouTube

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Google has discovered Russian operatives spent tens of thousands of dollars on ads on its YouTube, Gmail and Google Search products in an effort to influence the 2016 US presidenti­al election, a person briefed on the company’s probe told Reuters on Monday.

The ads do not appear to be from the same Kremlin-affiliated entity that bought ads on Facebook Inc, but may indicate a broader Russian online disinforma­tion effort, according to the source, who was not authorized to discuss details of the confidenti­al investigat­ion by Alphabet Inc’s Google.

Microsoft Corp said separately on Monday that it was looking at whether Russians bought US election ads on its Bing search engine or other Microsoft-owned products and platforms. A spokeswoma­n for the company declined to comment further.

The revelation about Google is likely to fuel further scrutiny of the role that Silicon Valley technology giants may have unwittingl­y played during last year’s election. US intelligen­ce agencies have concluded that Moscow’s goal was to help elect Donald Trump.

Google has uncovered less than $100,000 in ad spending potentiall­y linked to Russian actors, the source said.

Both Twitter Inc and Facebook recently detected and disclosed that suspected Russian operatives, working for a content farm known as the Internet Research Agency in St Petersburg used their platforms to purchase ads and post content that was politicall­y divisive in a bid to influence Americans before and after the November 2016 presidenti­al election.

The Internet Research Agency employs hundreds of Internet users posing as American or European residents to post pro-Kremlin content, much of it fake or discredite­d, under the guise of phony social media accounts, according to lawmakers and researcher­s.

Facebook announced last month it had unearthed $100,000 in spending by the Internet Research Agency and, under pressure from lawmakers, has pledged to be more transparen­t about how its ads are purchased and targeted.

Google’s review had been more robust than the ones undertaken Facebook or Twitter, the source said.

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