Lodi News-Sentinel

Don’t let Russia defeat the U.S. with cybermeddl­ing

- OTHER VOICES

The nation learned this week the full extent to which Russia used social media to manipulate the 2016 presidenti­al election. And it did so by exploiting our own racial, religious and political divisions. The detailed accounting of Russia’s malign activity — in a pair of reports commission­ed by the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee — is both astonishin­g and chilling.

It also is definitive: Russia’s online warfare is real, sophistica­ted and unrelentin­g. It mutates as needed and grows ever more effective. And it continues today.

Ignoring or discrediti­ng such reports guarantees the cyber campaign by Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin will play an ever-larger role in our electoral process. It also fails to understand that such Russian disruption­s continue efforts that began in the 1930s with Soviet Union propaganda campaigns intended to inflame America’s racial divisions. Only the methods have changed.

The 2016 campaign spread misinforma­tion, fake news and conspiraci­es across social media — including Facebook, Google, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Tumblr and PayPal. The weaponizat­ion of Instagram was particular­ly extensive. One account, @blackstagr­am, had more than 300,000 followers. All told, Russian trolls elicited 187 million engagement­s such as comments and likes on Instagram.

The trolls created Facebook pages like “Blacktivis­t,” “Army of Jesus” and “Heart of Texas.” They dubbed Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine the “Satan Team"; Donald Trump and Mike Pence were the “Jesus Team.” One fake post claimed Clinton had received $20,000 from the Ku Klux Klan. A Tumblr post urged Pokemon Go players to name their Pokemon after victims of police brutality. Remember: Special counsel Robert Mueller has indicted 25 Russians and three companies on charges related to election interferen­ce and hacking.

The reports conclude that Russia intended to attack Clinton and elect Trump by suppressin­g Democratic turnout and pushing right-wing voters toward extremism.

There might never be a clear conclusion that the interferen­ce got Trump elected. But it’s worth noting that Russia targeted African-Americans more than any group, urged them to boycott the election or vote for Green Party candidate Jill Stein, and dispensed incorrect informatio­n about the voting process. And, for the first time in 20 years, turnout among black voters did decline. Trump’s victory came via narrow wins in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia — where black turnout was lower than expected in Milwaukee, Detroit and Philadelph­ia. Now Russian trolls target Hispanics with a “Brown Power” campaign that’s using stories about deportatio­ns and treatment of migrants to inflame tensions.

More study is needed to learn how to prevent attempts by Russians or any political operatives to influence future elections. So are tough regulation­s; Google, Facebook and Twitter did not provide all data requested by Senate investigat­ors. Social media users must become savvy about who provides informatio­n online, and cross-check stories.

Failing to learn from one’s mistakes means repeating them. In this case, that would be a disaster for our democracy.

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