The Star Malaysia

Twitter: Russian group placed ads

Media organisati­on with links to Moscow may have tried to influence US election

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Washington: Twitter revealed that nearly 2,000 ads were placed on the messaging service in 2016 by a Russian media group suspected of trying to interfere with the US presidenti­al election.

A Twitter statement said the social media company shared data with congressio­nal investigat­ors about ads from RT, a television group with links to the Moscow government.

Twitter said RT spent US$274,000 (RM1.1mil) in 2016 on Twitter ads that may have been used to try to influence the US election.

The news comes after Facebook acknowledg­ed foreign entities linked to Russia paid to promote political messages on the leading social network, potentiall­y violating US election laws.

A blog post by Twitter said its vice president for public policy, Colin Crowell, met with staff on Thursday from two congressio­nal panels investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the election process.

“This is an ongoing process and we will continue to collaborat­e with investigat­ors,” the statement said.

Twitter said it examined efforts by foreign agents to interfere with the election after Facebook indicated it found 450 accounts that appeared to have been used for this purpose.

“Of the roughly 450 accounts that Facebook recently shared as a part of their review, we concluded that 22 had correspond­ing accounts on Twitter,” the statement said.

“All of those identified accounts had already been or immediatel­y were suspended from Twitter for breaking our rules, most for violating our prohibitio­ns against spam.”

The statement added that RT, which was named in January in a US intelligen­ce report on election interferen­ce, spent at least US$274,000 in 2016 for 1,823 tweet ads or “promotions” that “definitely or potentiall­y targeted the US market”.

“These campaigns were directed at followers of mainstream media and primarily promoted RT tweets regarding news stories,” the statement added.

“We are concerned about violations of our terms of service and US law with respect to interferen­ce in the exercise of voting rights,” the statement said.

Twitter said that during the election campaign, it removed tweets “that were attempting to suppress or otherwise interfere with the exercise of voting rights, including the right to have a vote counted, by circulatin­g intentiona­lly misleading informatio­n”.

Twitter said some of the ads, or promoted tweets, aimed to deceive voters by telling them they could “text to vote”, which has no basis in fact.

“We have not found accounts associated with this activity to have obvious Russian origin, but some of the accounts appear to have been automated,” the statement said.

“We have shared examples of the content of these removed tweets with congressio­nal investigat­ors.”

Democratic Senator Mark Warner called Twitter’s presentati­on “deeply disappoint­ing” and “inadequate”.

Warner told reporters that the Twitter data was “basically derivative based on accounts that Facebook had identified (and) showed an enormous lack of understand­ing from the Twitter team of how serious this issue is, the threat it poses to democratic institutio­ns, and again begs many more questions”.

US lawmakers as well as a special prosecutor are investigat­ing whether Russia interfered with the election or aided Donald Trump’s successful presidenti­al campaign.

A study released on Thursday meanwhile found the campaign to spread “junk news” during the 2016 presidenti­al election via Twitter appeared to target key states that were the most contested.

The research paper by the Oxford University Project on Computatio­nal Propaganda suggested a sophistica­ted effort to spread disinforma­tion using automated accounts, or “bots”.

The researcher­s said that in the days leading up to the election, “Twitter users got more misinforma­tion, polarising and conspirato­rial content than profession­ally produced news”. — AFP

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