Beware the Bots!
According to US intelligence officials, attempts by foreign entities to influence American politics are pervasive and ongoing. The President’s national security advisor recently warned that not only Russia but also China, Iran and North Korea are trying to interfere in this fall’s midterm elections.
Russian agents have used fake accounts on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and other social media platforms to sow divisions among longstanding racial, ethnic, gender and partisan lines. They often post bogus advertisements or deploy ‘bots’ — short for ‘robots’. Bots are automated scripts that mimic the activities of real people — in massive numbers. In 2016 the Russian ‘trolls’ managed to dupe hundreds of thousands of people online. Twitter alone identified 3,814 fake Russian-linked accounts: one had more than 100,000 followers. While many of the messages focused on building support for Donald Trump, they also worked to bolster Bernie Sanders, opposed and supported Black Lives Matter, and spread offensive racist and sexist ideas and images intended to polarize and divide people.
Cybersecurity professionals are working to protect our election systems and Facebook, Google, Twitter, and other social media companies are trying to fight fake news, hate speech and foreign propaganda on their sites. But it is a challenge to do so while also preserving freedom of speech and healthy political debate.
The average person can help by resisting the impulse to immediately share inflammatory comments and images. Following are some common-sense recommendations from the experts:
- Be skeptical about everything you see online. If a story is coming from a person, group, or news source that you don’t know, you might not be able to trust it.
- Slow down and think — if something smells phony, it probably is. Dig deeper when you see or read outrageous things. Credible, non-partisan fact-checking sites include Politifact.com
, FactCheck.org
and Snopes.com.
- Be cautious about sharing provocative images and quotes with the general public, or even with select groups of friends. You don’t want you and your friends to be part of the problem.
- Get your news from multiple sources. Reliable news organizations have at their core the same story, but they provide different analyses and different perspectives. If you want to be better educated about the news, you’re better served by understanding those different perspectives.
- Don’t accept a ‘friend request’ from someone you don’t know, especially if the person’s profile lacks a face or credible background information.
Firstdraftnews.org offers a free, one-hour course to the public on how to verify online media to avoid falling for hoaxes, rumors and misinformation. For a deep look into how ‘bots’ work, see http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/01/27/technology/social-media-bots.html.
(The image above represents 1,245 ‘tweets’ sent by a Russian ‘troll factory’ indicted by special counsel Robert Mueller for interfering with American electoral and political processes. For a full explanation of the image, see fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-you-found-in-3-million-russian-troll-tweets.)
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




