Ben Nimmo Profile picture
Jun 28, 2018 14 tweets 5 min read Read on X
#Electionwatch thread: The funny thing about Mexico's "King of fake news" is that most of his likes come from India and Brazil.

King of fake news, or just fake king?

medium.com/dfrlab/electio…
"Victory Lab" claims to be a fake-news titan in Mexico. Its founder, Carlos Merlo, says that people like him got Trump elected.

The first odd thing about the Victory Lab FB page: how come the top two recommendations are to users in India?
The second odd thing: this post got 3,500 likes, and no other reactions at all.

Facebook introduced varied reactions in 2016, guys.
And look at this. These don't look very like Hispanic names on the likes.

Victory Lab, fake-news titan, seems to be buying its likes from an Indian like-farm.
Other posts got tons of Brazilian likes.

From accounts with profile pictures that were taken straight off the internet.
Victory Lab isn't very active on Twitter, but a couple of posts got hundreds of retweets.

Including this one. 273 retweets, of which 269 were protected. That's a ratio I've only ever seen in botnets before.
Here's one of the visible accounts. Russian-language profile, multi-language posts.

Definitely a bot, but it looks like a commercial one, hired in for the occasion.

Victory Lab apparently needs to rent bots to do its own advertising.
There's a pattern here: Indian and Brazilian likes on FB, bots on Twitter.

Now look at this post, from a Mexican FB page attacking front-runner Lopez Obrador.

Same pattern.
Different page, same pattern again.

Not a smoking gun, but definitely not Mexican.
These FB pages used the same hashtags, including AMLOcuras.

Look at the traffic on that hashtag on Twitter the same day.
Look at the number of posts compared with the number of users. Botlike.
Most of the accounts have been suspended, but this one was left. Compare the profile picture to the book.

Bot.
Follow the hashtag and here's yet another page, where it features in the comments.

Same hashtag. Same pattern of foreign likes.

Looks like it's the same network again.
Conclusion: Victory Lab certainly gets its own likes and bots from abroad. These political pages and hashtags do too.

That's unlikely to be a coincidence.

Looks like Victory Lab is outsourcing fake amplification, and claiming it as its own work. /

Thread ends.

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More from @benimmo

Oct 9, 2018
Thread: just a snapshot of the increasing polarisation of the US Twittersphere ahead of the midterms.

Polarised communities proved to be an easy target for influence operations in 2014-18.

medium.com/dfrlab/electio…
Scanned three sets of paired election-related hashtags: #VoteRed / #VoteBlue, #RedWave2018 / #BlueWave2018, #FlipItRed / #FlipItBlue.

First scan covered 48 hours. Overall, pro-Democratic hashtags got significantly higher traffic (79k posts compared with 47k posts).
On this scan, users of pro-Democratic hashtags were roughly double the number of users on pro-Republican hashtags (40k users compared with 21k users).
Read 6 tweets
Oct 5, 2018
I mentioned the Kremlin's standard response technique of dismiss, distort, distract, dismay.

Quite a few of the elements are here, in the latest Russian MFA responses to the OPCW / GRU hacking story.

mid.ru/en/foreign_pol…
Dismiss: insult the critics. Plenty of that in the statement.

"Anti-Russian spy mania."
"Strong paranoia." (Not just "paranoia", you'll note.)
"Absurd anti-Russian attacks."
Interestingly, they didn't use the word "Russophobia" in this one, though it's been the bulwark of Kremlin defences since 2014.
Read 7 tweets
Oct 4, 2018
#OPCW hacking case: we've already had the Russian government trying to dismiss the latest UK / NL claims about the #GRU. That's tactic number 1.

Up next, expect attempts to distort, distract and dismay.
Distort. We saw this with the Skripal suspects, portrayed as "civilians" and snow-shy tourists.

Expect attempts to say that the photos were faked, the evidence was made up, and / or the men were harmless visitors on a diplomatic visit to fix the Embassy wifi.
Distract. Accuse the accusers.

Expect the arguments, "The West hacks people too," or "You killed civilians in Libya / Afghanistan / Vietnam / insert name here."

Which doesn't justify use of CW on civilians, or attempts to cover it up.
Read 4 tweets
Sep 13, 2018
#TrollTracker: interesting troll spike from the pro-Kremlin / pro-Assad gang against @janinedigi.

Image: @Sysomos scan of traffic over the past 7 days.
For those who don't know @janinedigi, here's a list of her awards as a war correspondent.

She reported from places including Grozny, Kosovo, Palestine, Rwanda, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Source: janinedigiovanni.com/awards-and-rec…
Here's the tweet which triggered the storm: a post saying that RT and Sputnik are not journalists.

That's a hell of a call for a genuine award-winning journalist to make, so let's look at evidence.
Read 11 tweets
Sep 6, 2018
Rare decision from @Ofcom here, finding broadcaster Ausaf UK no longer "fit and proper" to hold a licence.

Note that RT is also under scrutiny against the "fit and proper" criteria, but that Ofcom sets a high bar for these decisions.

ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/…
Particularly striking: Ausaf TV had its licence revoked before it started broadcasting, based on the content of the associated newspaper.

Including glorification of violent jihad and endorsement of listed terrorists.
Rather unwisely, the MD of the TV station initially denied that he was linked to the newspaper, then confirmed that he was.

Making false claims to the regulator is seldom a way to win confidence.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 6, 2018
Looks like someone tried to get hashtag SkripalHoax to trend overnight.

822 mentions. It really didn't do very well.
Let's look at some of the arguments.

Probably the most popular in the pro-Kremlin crowd was the claim that the Met Police photos of the arrival in Gatwick had the same timestamp, and therefore must have been photoshopped.
... unless there's more than one arrival channel at Gatwick, and they were walking together.

(h/t @bleidl for the photo)
Read 10 tweets

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