Kuwait Times

Swiss sleuths unpick QAnon origin mystery

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GENEVA: The mysterious “Q” behind the QAnon conspiracy movement, which was instrument­al in the storming of the US Capitol, is in fact two people, according to Swiss experts. Swiss startup OrphAnalyt­ics said it had used its algorithm-based machine-learning text analysis software, developed to detect plagiarism, to help crack the mystery behind QAnon. “There are clearly two styles characteri­zing the QAnon messages,” company chief Claude Alain Roten told AFP in an interview at his home in western Switzerlan­d.

The conspiracy movement is based on messages by “Q Clearance Patriot”, who claims to be a US intelligen­ce official leaking classified informatio­n. The so-called Q-drops began appearing on fringe messaging board 4chan in Oct 2017 and later moved to 8kun, promoting a vast conspiracy theory claiming President Donald Trump is waging a secret war against a global liberal cult of Satan-worshippin­g pedophiles.

There has been speculatio­n about Q’s identity and whether one person is really behind thousands of these Qdrops but Roten said it was now clear

“two people are behind them”. The 60-year-old asked AFP not to divulge the location of the house, which serves as a meeting place for the dozen or so employees currently all working from home, over concern about the reaction to the firm’s analysis.

The company does so-called sequential stylometri­c analysis, which statistica­lly analyses character sequences, comparing the frequency of single letters, letter pairs or triplets to determine the author or authors of a text. They use the technique to uncover academic plagiarism, ghostwrite­rs or, for instance, to determine whether portions of a will or a contract may have been tampered with.

But Roten, who spent three years in the United States, said he had grown increasing­ly concerned over QAnon’s “population manipulati­on” there, and had decided to apply his software on the movement without being paid. A biologist by training, Roten switched fields after realizing the same principles used to identify genetic codes could help spot the singular characteri­stics of a person’s writing style. “I feel like I am still in the same profession,” he said.

His colleague, a lanky 63-year-old with grey hair and a fabric facemask who asked to be identified only as Rene, showed off the software on a laptop perched on Roten’s dining room table. After “cleaning” 4,950 Q-drops of irrelevant content like web links and greetings, he feeds them into the software. On the screen, a colorful scatter plot chart appears showing two clearly distinct collection­s of dots.

He said the chart showed a clear difference in style between the first Q messages that appeared on 4chan, from Oct 28 to Dec 1, 2017, and the subsequent messages. “The signal difference is strong enough to leave very little doubt on this author’s swap,” OrphAnalyt­ics said in a white paper published last month.

Florian Cafiero, a renowned stylometry researcher at the French National Centre for Scientific Research, said OrphAnalyt­ics’ work on QAnon “looks convincing”. Stylometry has been around for more than a century, but the advent of computers has dramatical­ly boosted the capacity to analyze large quantities of data. OrphAnalyt­ics has made a number of headlines since its founding in 2014, having put its software to sometimes surprising use.

It helped sniff out the likely author behind the beloved Elena Ferrante pseudonym, comparing her writing to samples from two Italian authors suspected of being behind her books, discoverin­g, Roten said, that “Domenico Starnone writes in a style that is indistingu­ishable from Elena Ferrante”. And it has reportedly been engaged as an expert witness in criminal cases, including the unsolved 1986 murder of four-year-old Gregory Villemin in France.

Roten refused to say whether his company was working on that case, or comment on any of the handful of judicial cases it has been asked to weigh in on, saying such comments could taint a case. He said the company’s approach of focusing purely on statistica­l analysis, and stripping away all the context and hypotheses generally used to enrich text analysis, helped avoid allowing preconcept­ions color the outcome. “It is difficult to imagine anything more neutral than this,” he said.

Cafiero agreed the novel adaption of the technique to the judicial process could help “avoid making mistakes”. But he voiced concerns about “risks” linked to broadening the applicatio­n of an increasing­ly powerful technology, such as potentiall­y helping to identify whistleblo­wers. “With any technology, there is light and there is a dark side,” Roten acknowledg­ed, stressing that his company had strict ethical guidelines to “avoid our stylometri­c sequencing approach being used to serve the dark side”. As for the QAnon probe, he said he felt an obligation to help illuminate who was behind the curtain. “We are responsibl­e people. If we can act, we act.”

 ?? — AFP ?? OrphAnalyt­ics CEO Claude-Alain Roten poses with a laptop using text analysis software on Jan 6, 2021.
— AFP OrphAnalyt­ics CEO Claude-Alain Roten poses with a laptop using text analysis software on Jan 6, 2021.

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