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Mr. Karate II

Edo Express Delivery Guy
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«How a fake network pushes pro-China propaganda
By Flora Carmichael,
BBC News, Published: 5 August

woQ7qIJ.jpg


A sprawling network of more than 350 fake social media profiles is pushing pro-China narratives and attempting to discredit those seen as opponents of China's government, according to a new study.

The aim is to delegitimise the West and boost China's influence and image overseas, the report by the Centre for Information Resilience (CIR) suggests.

The study, shared with the BBC, found that the network of fake profiles circulated garish cartoons depicting, among others, exiled Chinese tycoon Guo Wengui, an outspoken critic of China.

Other controversial figures featured in the cartoons included "whistleblower" scientist Li-Meng Yan, and Steve Bannon, former political strategist for Donald Trump.

Each of these individuals has themselves been accused of spreading disinformation, including false information about Covid-19.

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The cartoons shared seek to ridicule (left-right) Bannon, Li-Meng Yan and Guo Wengui

Some of the accounts - spread across Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube - use fake AI-generated profile pictures, while others appear to have been hijacked after previously posting in other languages.

There is no concrete evidence that the network is linked to the Chinese government, but according to the CIR, a non-profit group which works to counter disinformation, it resembles pro-China networks previously taken down by Twitter and Facebook.

These networks amplified pro-China narratives similar to those promoted by Chinese state representatives and state media.

Much of the content shared by the network focuses on the US, and in particular on divisive issues like gun laws and race politics.

One of the narratives pushed by the network paints the US as having a poor human rights record. Posts from the fake accounts cite the murder of George Floyd among examples, as well as discrimination against Asians.

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This account has since been suspended by Twitter for violating its rules

Some accounts repeatedly deny human rights abuses in the Xinjiang region, where experts say China has detained at least a million Muslims against their will, calling the allegations "lies fabricated by the United States and the West".

"The aim of the network appears to be to delegitimise the West by amplifying pro-Chinese narratives," said Benjamin Strick, the author of the CIR report.

There are strong similarities between this network and the so-called "Spamouflage Dragon" propaganda network identified by social analytics firm Graphika.

Commenting on the new study Ira Hubert, a senior investigative analyst at Graphika, said: "The report shows that on US platforms, there was no 'honeymoon' in the first months of the Biden administration.

"The network put out a steady mix of anti-US content, for example cheering US 'defeat' ahead of its withdrawal from Afghanistan and painting the US as a poor ally whose aid to India was inadequate during some of its worst months battling Covid."

How was the network uncovered?

The CIR mapped hashtags favoured by previously identified networks, unearthing more accounts that showed signs of being part of an influence operation.

Tell-tale signs included high levels of activity pushing propaganda narratives and repeated use of the same hashtags. Newly created accounts, accounts with usernames that appeared to be randomly generated, and accounts with very few followers also raised red flags.
Some profiles were created to post original content, while others only shared, liked and commented on those original posts, to help them reach a wider audience.

This kind of activity is often referred to as "astroturfing" because it is designed to create the appearance of a grass-roots campaign.

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BENJAMIN STRICK / CIR, Image caption,The study visualises how different accounts amplify each other - each small node represents a Twitter account

Fake people

Many of the fake profiles used AI generated photos - a relatively new phenomenon that allows computers to create realistic looking images of people who don't exist. Unlike stolen profile images of real people, the AI generated images, which are created by a type of machine learning framework called StyleGAN, cannot be traced using a reverse image search.

The use of fake profile pictures in disinformation campaigns is becoming more common as users and platforms become more wary of suspicious accounts.

The CIR used various techniques to identify fake profile pictures in the network. The synthetic images always put the eyes in the same location, so lining them all up can help identify a collection of fake profile pictures.

Normally, a random collection of profile pictures would display much more variety in the cropping and the alignment of the eyes.

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The network uses images of people who do not exist


Other signs include blurred edges around the hair, teeth at strange angles, and blurred objects around the face.

Many of the Facebook accounts believed to be part of the network appeared to have Turkish names. These accounts may once have belonged to real people but were later hijacked or sold and given new profile pictures.

Hijacked accounts also spread the network's pro-China narratives on YouTube. Accounts that had previously posted in English or German and then lain dormant for years suddenly started posting Chinese language content from official Chinese state broadcasters.

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BENJAMIN STRICK / CIR, Image caption,The report found spam Tweets using the same text, tags and images all uploaded on the same day

The CIR shared its research with the social media platforms involved.

Facebook has removed the accounts on its platform highlighted in the study.

A Facebook spokesman said: "In September 2019, we removed a network of spam activity that posted lifestyle and political clickbait, primarily in Chinese. This network had almost no engagement on our platform, and we continue to work with researchers and our industry peers to detect and block their attempts to come back, like those accounts mentioned in this report."

YouTube also terminated accounts in the network for violating YouTube's community guidelines.

Twitter said it had also now removed almost all of the accounts identified by CIR, as well as a number of others engaged in similar behaviour. It said its investigations are still ongoing.

"When we identify information operation campaigns that we can reliably attribute to state-linked activity - either domestic or foreign-led - we disclose them to our public archive."

line

Analysis - Kerry Allen, BBC Monitoring China media analyst

Over the past decade, billions of dollars have gone into funding the growth of China's presence on international platforms.

But with Facebook, Twitter and YouTube blocked in the mainland, and only accessible via a VPN, the country has struggled to get such platforms recognised as viable competitors to Western juggernauts. It has needed not only Chinese voices, but foreign voices, to show that the country has "arrived".

"Wolf warrior diplomacy" has emerged, with officials using Twitter accounts to fly the flag for Communist Party rhetoric. China wants to portray itself as a friend to the world - and not a repressive, authoritarian state, as it perceives Western nations make it out to be.

With more than one billion internet users, China certainly has the capability to orchestrate large-scale social media campaigns, and target what it sees as anti-China voices with a wealth of opposing opinions.

But with English-language skills limited in China, there are often clumsy tell-tale signs that a Chinese troll is behind such accounts. Many rely on automatic translation software to turn Chinese messages into English, meaning such messages are riddled with typos, or contain clumsy grammatical structures.

And with many Western outlets inaccessible to them within China, users generally have very little knowledge of who they are meant to be targeting, so they simply piggyback off the replies of others from within the same network.

Graphics by Simon Martin».

Original article:

 

LoneSage

A Broken Man
20 Year Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2004
Posts
44,865
China has long been using the freedoms offered by western governments to promote their agenda. And now that they're the second strongest in the world, there are many useful idiots lapping it up.

The Uyghur genocide deniers are the worst. "Where are the videos?" Morons don't realize how much control the Party has over their lives.
 

@M

Vanessa's Drinking Buddy,
20 Year Member
Joined
Feb 10, 2003
Posts
7,174
All China has to do is send me some bootleg LEGOs with propaganda decals I can't read or understand and I'll plaster photos of them all over the internet for them. 😂
 

racecar

Strolheim Choir Member
20 Year Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2004
Posts
4,097
There are plenty of it on Facebook and YouTube . Try to say some shut about China on WeChat and you get a phone call from WeChat tell you to stop or they suspend your account .
 

ratson

Hyperactive Stoner
15 Year Member
Joined
Apr 27, 2008
Posts
8,093
Well at least wechat warns you.
Yesterday, Microsoft decided to lock my account, I don't know why and they're not going to give me any details. Basically everything linked to that account is lost, my emails, windows 10, xbox account. Chances of getting it back again are close to nothing. Fuck microsoft!
 

@M

Vanessa's Drinking Buddy,
20 Year Member
Joined
Feb 10, 2003
Posts
7,174
Wtf is WeChat?
Noob! It's where all the cool kids chat about Wii. Do you even Wii bowl, bro? It's like you're really bowling, but, there is no actual ball or pins. Insane!
 

Mr.Bojangles

War Room Troll
Joined
Mar 12, 2020
Posts
902
Noob! It's where all the cool kids chat about Wii. Do you even Wii bowl, bro? It's like you're really bowling, but, there is no actual ball or pins. Insane!
People still buy new Nintendo consoles?
 

Taiso

Remembers The North
20 Year Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2000
Posts
13,156
I mean...

...at this point, do I really need to post the meme?

Lagduf knows.
 

Mr.Bojangles

War Room Troll
Joined
Mar 12, 2020
Posts
902
Nah bro, you can keep your plushies. Maybe ask Lonesage if he wants them. They can go next to his Barbies.
 

@M

Vanessa's Drinking Buddy,
20 Year Member
Joined
Feb 10, 2003
Posts
7,174
Nah bro, you can keep your plushies. Maybe ask Lonesage if he wants them. They can go next to his Barbies.
C'mon, man, if you really want to fit in here, you have to deal in Zelda dolls, it's part of our sophisticated hardcore gaming culture. Everybody does it and it's totally fey, all day!77432f8dd04a4fb05d57a0c76d8417a1--princess-zelda-doll-repaint.jpg
 

Mr.Bojangles

War Room Troll
Joined
Mar 12, 2020
Posts
902
Hey M, nevermind about selling your plushies to Lonesage. He's gonna need all his dollar bills for his next trip to check out Beijings finest male strippers.
 

@M

Vanessa's Drinking Buddy,
20 Year Member
Joined
Feb 10, 2003
Posts
7,174
Those are creepy as fuck. Also, why does Link look like Sylvie, minus the elephant dong?
Stop seeing Sylvie in every Keebler elf who tries to sell you a bag of Deku cookies. Also, stop thinking about dongs, try thinking about Zelda's tits instead for a change.
 
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