Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hired hands

- THE WASHINGTON POST

There’s a risk to running a disinforma­tion operation yourself: If the operation gets caught, you get caught, too. So government­s, politician­s and parties around the globe have found a solution. They pay someone else to do it for them.

Facebook’s latest report on so-called “coordinate­d inauthenti­c behavior” spotlights an attempt to spread lies about coronaviru­s vaccines. The effort flopped—but more important than its immediate effects is what it tells us about the trajectory of such campaigns.

The tactics, however, are only one piece of the puzzle. Another is who’s carrying them out: in this case, a subsidiary of a British-registered marketing firm whose activities, according to a BBC investigat­ion, are primarily conducted from Russia.

The subsidiary, Fazze, describes itself as a “marketing agency.” These “black PR” firms will, as Israel’s Archimedes Group put it, “use every tool . . . to change reality according to our client’s wishes.” The services aren’t typically as sophistica­ted as government campaigns, but they offer obfuscatio­n. They’re also cheap.

The Oxford Internet Institute unearthed third-party contractor­s targeting at least 48 countries last year, and some are much closer to home than to Moscow. A campaign under the banner India vs. Disinforma­tion publishing “fact checks” in favor of Prime Minister Narendra Modi turned out itself to be disinforma­tion, connected to a Canadian communicat­ions company called Press Monitor.

A group of Facebook pages doing more or less the same thing to prop up Bolivia’s right-wing government was traced to CLS Strategies, a communicat­ions firm based in Washington.

The proper policy response is elusive, not least because of the implicatio­ns for free corporate expression. A vow among nations not to pay private companies to do their disinforma­tion dirty work—and to prevent those within their borders from engaging in foreign interferen­ce? A sort of export control regime for disinforma­tion as a service?

President Joe Biden, after a false start, might have had some success persuading Russian President Vladimir Putin to crack down on the worst ransomware actors in Russia. Now countries interested in Internet arms treaties have another weapon that needs controllin­g.

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