Santa Cruz Sentinel

Social media manipulati­on affects even US senators

- Cy Orika Kinetz

The conversati­on taking place around two U. S. senators’ verified social media accounts remained vulnerable to manipulati­on through artificial­ly inflated shares and likes from fake users, even amid heightened scrutiny in the run up to the U. S. presidenti­al election, an investigat­ion by the NATO Strategic Communicat­ions Centre of Excellence found.

Researcher­s from the center, a NATO- accredited research group based in Riga, Latvia, paid three Russian companies 300 euros ($368) to buy 337,768 fake likes, views and shares of posts on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube and TikTok, including content from verified accounts of Sens. Chuck Grassley and Chris Murphy.

Grassley’s office confirmed that the Republican from Iowa participat­ed in the experiment. Murphy, a Connecticu­t Democrat, said in a statement that he agreed to participat­e because it’s important to understand how vulnerable even verified accounts are.

“We’ve seen how easy it is for foreign adversarie­s to use social media as a tool to manipulate election campaigns and stoke political unrest,” Murphy said. “It’s clear that social media companies are not doing enough to combat misinforma­tion and paid manipulati­on on their own platforms and more needs to be done to prevent abuse.”

In an age when much public debate has moved online, widespread social media manipulati­on not only distorts commercial markets, it is also a threat to national security, NATO StratCom director Janis Sarts told The Associated Press.

“These kinds of inauthenti­c accounts are being hired to trick the algorithm into thinking this is very popular informatio­n and thus make divisive things seem more popular and get them to more people. That in turn deepens divisions and thus weakens us as a society,” he explained.

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