Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Russians may be responsibl­e for false info on Princess Kate

- By Mark Landler and Adam Satariano

LONDON —The whirl of conspiracy theories that enveloped Catherine, Princess of Wales, before she disclosed her cancer diagnosis last week probably didn’t need help from a foreign state. But researcher­s in Britain said Wednesday that a notorious Russian disinforma­tion operation helped stir the pot.

Martin Innes, an expert on digital disinforma­tion at Cardiff University in Wales, said he and his colleagues tracked 45 social media accounts that posted identical spurious informatio­n about Catherine, also known as Kate, to a Kremlin-linked disinforma­tion network, which has previously spread divisive stories about Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

As in those cases, Mr. Innes said, the influence campaign appeared calculated to inflame divisions, deepen a sense of chaos in society and erode trust in institutio­ns — in this case, the British royal family and the news media.

“It provokes an emotional reaction,” he said. “The story was already being framed in conspiracy terms, so you can appeal to those people. And people who support the royal family get angry.”

The motive, he said, was likely commercial as well as political. Social media traffic about Kate skyrockete­d over the past three months, as a dearth of informatio­n about her condition created a void that an online army filled with rumors and speculatio­n. For the Russian network, amplifying those posts through their accounts would enable them to boost their own traffic statistics and follower counts.

It is not clear who might have hired the disinforma­tion network to go after Kate, but it has a track record of campaigns to undermine the countries and people at odds with the Kremlin. Britain’s robust support for Ukraine, and London’s long-standing antagonism with Moscow, would make it a tempting target for the Russians.

Kensington Palace, where Kate and her husband, Prince William, have their offices, declined to comment. The palace has appealed to the news media and the public to give Kate privacy, after she announced she had cancer in a video Friday.

Mr. Innes, who leads a research program exploring the causes and consequenc­es of digital disinforma­tion, said his team noticed a mysterious spike in a certain type of social media posts March 19, a day after video surfaced of Kate and William leaving a food shop near their home in Windsor.

 ?? Laurence Griffiths/Pool via AP ?? An expert on digital disinforma­tion at Cardiff University in Wales said he tracked 45 social media accounts that posted identical spurious informatio­n about Princess Kate to a Kremlin-linked disinforma­tion network.
Laurence Griffiths/Pool via AP An expert on digital disinforma­tion at Cardiff University in Wales said he tracked 45 social media accounts that posted identical spurious informatio­n about Princess Kate to a Kremlin-linked disinforma­tion network.

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