Greenwich Time (Sunday)

Biden audio shared by ‘Russian agent’ online

-

The leaked recordings were hardly a political bombshell: The apparent phone conversati­ons between Joe Biden and Ukraine’s then-president largely confirm Biden’s account of his dealings in Ukraine.

But the choppy audio, disclosed by a Ukrainian lawmaker whom U.S. officials described Thursday as an “active Russian agent” who has sought to spread online misinforma­tion about Biden, was nonetheles­s seized on by President Donald Trump as well as his supporters to promote conspiracy theories about the Democratic nominee. Social media posts and videos about the recordings have been viewed millions of times, according to an Associated Press analysis, even though Trump’s own administra­tion says they rely on “false and unsubstant­iated narratives.”

The audio’s proliferat­ion on social media shows how foreign operations aimed at influencin­g the U.S. election are still easily reaching Americans, despite efforts by Facebook, YouTube and Twitter to rein in such meddling.

Since there’s no evidence the heavily edited recordings have been stolen or were entirely fabricated, they’ve been able to flourish online, skirting new policies social media companies rolled out to prevent foreign interferen­ce in this year’s elections. And unlike in 2016, when Russia used bogus social media accounts or bots to wage a misinforma­tion campaign, this time they’re being spread by legitimate American social media users.

“It’s certainly an influence campaign,” Nina Jankowicz, a disinforma­tion fellow at the nonpartisa­n Wilson Center, said of the recordings. “It’s misleading to an audience that doesn’t have the full picture.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States