AP: Cyborgs, Trolls and bots: A guide to online misinformation

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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
That above link is really interesting.

They actually went through this guys youtube feeds and tracked it. It is a bummer that it only shows the political videos though.
I haven't finished reading it yet, but man I really hope that they did a deep dive into his entire social media history. They could do a really interesting map of how things like his mood would change (based on posts made (frequency/times/interactions with actual people he knows in real life online could be interesting too/ and what not) over time too.

Man this kind of stuff is going to make for some fantastic books someday soon I bet.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/donald-trump-business-lifestyle-technology-politics-c766a2cf2458b29eee939d6dbc266442
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On the face of it, you might think that the QAnon conspiracy has largely disappeared from big social media sites. But that’s not quite the case.

True, you’re much less likely to find popular QAnon catchphrases like “great awakening,” “the storm” or “trust the plan” on Facebook these days. Facebook and Twitter have removed tens of thousands of accounts dedicated to the baseless conspiracy theory, which depicts former President Donald Trump as a hero fighting a secret battle against a sect of devil-worshipping pedophiles who dominate Hollywood, big business, the media and government.

Gone are the huge “Stop the Steal” groups that spread falsehoods about the 2020 U.S. presidential elections. Trump is gone as well, banned from Twitter permanently and suspended from posting on Facebook until 2023.

But QAnon is far from winding down. Federal intelligence officials recently warned that its adherents could commit more violence, like the deadly Capitol insurrection on Jan. 6. At least one open supporter of QAnon has been elected to Congress. In the four years since someone calling themselves “Q” started posting enigmatic messages on fringe internet discussions boards, QAnon has grown up.

That’s partly because QAnon now encompasses a variety of conspiracy theories, from evangelical or religious angles to alleged pedophilia in Hollywood and the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, said Jared Holt, a resident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s DFRLab who focuses on domestic extremism. “Q-specific stuff is sort of dwindling,” he said. But the worldviews and conspiracy theories that QAnon absorbed are still with us.

Loosely tying these movements together is a general distrust of a powerful, often leftist elite. Among the purveyors of anti-vaccine falsehoods, adherents of Trump’s “Big Lie” that the 2020 presidential election was stolen, and believers in just about any other worldview convinced that a shadowy cabal secretly controls things.

For social platforms, dealing with this faceless, shifting and increasingly popular mindset is a far more complicated challenge than they’ve dealt with in the past.

These ideologies “have cemented their place and now are a part of American folklore,” said Max Rizzuto, another researcher at DFRLab. “I don’t think we’ll ever see it disappear.”

Online, such groups now blend into the background. Where Facebook groups once openly referenced QAnon, you’ll now see others like “Since you missed this in the so called MSM,” a reference to the mainstream media. This page boasts more than 4,000 followers who post links to clips of Fox News’ Tucker Carlson and links to articles from right-wing publications such as Newsmax and the Daily Wire.

Subjects range from allegedly rampant crime to unfounded claims of widespread election fraud and an “outright war on conservatives.” Such groups aim to draw followers in deeper by directing them to further information on less-regulated sites such as Gab or Parler.

When DFRLab analyzed more than 40 million appearances of QAnon catchphrases and related terms on social media this spring, it found that their presence on mainstream platforms had declined significantly in recent months. After peaks in the late summer of 2020 and briefly on Jan. 6, QAnon catchphrases have largely evaporated from mainstream sites, DFRLab found.

So while your friends and relatives might not be posting wild conspiracies about Hillary Clinton drinking children’s blood, they might instead be repeating debunked claims such as that vaccines can alter your DNA.

There are several reasons for dwindling Q talk — Trump losing the presidential election, for instance. But the single biggest factor appears to have been the QAnon crackdown on Facebook and Twitter. Despite well-documented mistakesthat revealed spotty enforcement, the banishment largely appears to have worked. It is more difficult to come across blatant QAnon accounts on mainstream social media sites these days, at least from the publicly available data that does not include, for instance, hidden Facebook groups and private messages.

But while QAnon groups, pages and core accounts may be gone, many of their supporters remain on the big platforms — only now they’re camouflaging their language and watering down the most extreme tenets of QAnon to make them more palatable.

“There was a very, very explicit effort within the QAnon community to to camouflage their language,” said Angelo Carusone, the president and CEO of Media Matters, a liberal research group that has followed QAnon’s rise. “So they stopped using a lot of the codes, the triggers, the keywords that were eliciting the kinds of enforcement actions against them.”

Other dodges may have also helped. Rather than parroting Q slogans, for instance, for a while earlier this year supporters would type three asterisks next to their name to signal adherence to the conspiracy theory. (That’s a nod to former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, a three-star general).

Facebook says it has removed about 3,300 pages, 10,500 groups, 510 events, 18,300 Facebook profiles and 27,300 Instagram accounts for violating its policy against QAnon. “We continue to consult with experts and improve our enforcement in response to how harm evolves, including by recidivist groups,” the company said in a statement.

But the social giant will still cut individuals posting about QAnon slack, citing experts who warn that banning individual Q adherents “may lead to further social isolation and danger,” the company said. Facebook’s policies and response to QAnon continue to evolve. Since last August, the company says it has added dozens of new terms as the movement and its language has evolved.

Twitter, meanwhile, says it has consistently taken action against activity that could lead to offline harm. After the Jan. 6 insurrection, the company began permanently suspending thousands of accounts that it said were “primarily dedicated” to sharing dangerous QAnon material. Twitter said it has suspended 150,000 such accounts to date. Like Facebook, the company says its response is also evolving.

But the crackdown may have come too late. Carusone, for instance, noted that Facebook banned QAnon groups tied to violence six weeks before it banned QAnon more broadly. That effectively gave followers notice to regroup, camouflage and move to different platforms.

“If there were ever a time for a social media company to take a stand on QAnon content, it would have been like months ago, years ago,” DFRLabs’ Rizzuto said.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
So it looks like Russell Brand has been pushing Russian propaganda about Wikileaks and Snowden.


What he is ignoring in this bullshit video (that is well done) is that Snowden smuggled America's ability to collect and analyze vast amounts of data from across the internet to the Russian military with the help of Assange. Who then used that new weapon to attack our society/democracy.

BTW I love how he capitalized 'the REAL reason...' in his Snowden snowflake title.

This blows, I actually enjoyed Russell Brand when he was in that movie with Veronica Mars.

But it looks like he is sold out to propagandists.


The top comments are hilarious. After asking for you to provide a way to be tracked as a contact for himis pinned, it is all pro-snowdon trolls.

 

mooray

Well-Known Member
Yeah he's not exactly what I'd call "spot on" and he's definitely a little kooky, but I recently watched an episode with he and Ben Shapiro and his thoughts weren't the worst I've heard. The part that I like is that I don't find him malicious. He may be wrong about some things and he may have been sucked into some propaganda, but I don't see Trump troll maliciousness in there. I know, low bar, but that's where we are I guess.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Yeah he's not exactly what I'd call "spot on" and he's definitely a little kooky, but I recently watched an episode with he and Ben Shapiro and his thoughts weren't the worst I've heard. The part that I like is that I don't find him malicious. He may be wrong about some things and he may have been sucked into some propaganda, but I don't see Trump troll maliciousness in there. I know, low bar, but that's where we are I guess.
idk, looking at his feed, it really looks like someone who is being paid to spam these propaganda topics. Maybe he is doing it without realizing he is a useful idiot, but the warning signs are all there.

I especially question the 'Great Reset', Snowden/Assange love, and just the general spam clickbait well produced nature of it.

But I have only watched about 3 minutes of one video and a Snowden one, so I am not convinced I am not full of shit, so I appreciate the feedback. But that said, I wouldn't be surprised to see him, Kevin Sorbo, and Steven Segal going on some kind of whacky road trip to pull a Kayne West for the next Trump.
 

mooray

Well-Known Member
My exposure is limited as well. He's tough to follow sometimes, because he'll try to make a point and it often involves a dozen little offshoots like a somewhat crazy person, which he eventually does seem come full circle. Anyway, I'm not invested in defending anything from him. It just seemed like he wasn't aggro and his energy kept Ben Shapiro....mostly....out of his typical aggro state, so they were able to have a decent conversation. That's become a lot more valuable to me over the last handful of years.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
My exposure is limited as well. He's tough to follow sometimes, because he'll try to make a point and it often involves a dozen little offshoots like a somewhat crazy person, which he eventually does seem come full circle. Anyway, I'm not invested in defending anything from him. It just seemed like he wasn't aggro and his energy kept Ben Shapiro....mostly....out of his typical aggro state, so they were able to have a decent conversation. That's become a lot more valuable to me over the last handful of years.
I haven't llistened to much, I have no idea if it is all propaganda or anything. Most the good stuff will mostly be real good honest content, and then they sprinkle in say 20% cherry picked narrative.

At the very least if I was him, and knew I was not in on the scam, I would really take some time to figure out how I got radicalized online to the point that I am making videos that easily can be picked up and spread by the Russian military to cover their attack on our citizens.
 

mooray

Well-Known Member
The Khashoggi deal makes my blood boil. It's been, "oh this is terrible, we're really going to give 'em the beans on this one, oh hey look at this shiny thing over here!".
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/07/19/nso-business-us/
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The Israeli surveillance giant NSO Group and companies linked to it or its founders have spent millions of dollars in hopes of wooing their way into the U.S. market, hosting demonstrations for government intelligence officials and hiring Washington’s most prominent names despite pledges that its phone-hacking tool can’t be used inside the United States.

The company’s attempts to secure U.S. contracts appear to have been unsuccessful, with federal and local law enforcement agency representatives saying in emails and interviews that they balked at its Pegasus spyware tool’s million-dollar price tag.

But an influential network of Washington consultants, lawyers, lobbyists and other prominent personalities have earned money from the company, its parent company or its founders, a Washington Post review of government and company filings shows. Those beneficiaries include some of the most powerful members of the Obama, Trump and Biden administrations.

Read key takeaways from the Pegasus Project

Among those who’ve received payments from NSO or related companies are former chiefs of the Homeland Security and Justice departments, as well as Washington’s most prestigious law and public-relations firms, the public filings show.

These political heavyweights have defended NSO’s spy tool as an invaluable weapon against terrorists and human traffickers, and they have worked to soften the public image of a company accused in a federal lawsuit of helping spy on allies of Washington Post contributing columnist Jamal Khashoggi before his grisly murder in 2018. Reuters reported last year that FBI agents were investigating NSO’s role in targeting Americans, though the FBI has not confirmed that report. The agency declined to comment for this article.

In a statement to The Post, NSO said it had retained “top U.S. counsels” to help support its “life-saving mission” but declined to name its government customers or answer questions about its pursuit of contracts inside the United States.

The company said its “products, sold to vetted foreign governments, cannot be used to conduct cybersurveillance within the United States, and no foreign customer has ever been granted technology that would enable them to access phones with U.S. numbers.”

NSO, however, continues to look for opportunities in the United States. In Justice Department foreign-agent filings last month, the law firm Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman said it had signed a six-month contract, at $75,000 a month, to advise NSO on “potential business partners,” “U.S. government procurement regulations” and “assistance with education of government officials about NSO’s technology.” Two law firm employees on the account, Brian Finch and Nicole Steinberg, advise clients on the Safety Act, a DHS program offering “liability protections to sellers of qualified anti-terrorism technologies.” The firm and the two attorneys did not respond to requests for comment.

NSO began pitching U.S. intelligence and police officials on its hacking tool as early as 2014, launching a side company, Westbridge Technologies, with filings in Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, state business records and internal emails show.
How Pegasus works
Target:
Someone sends what’s known as a trap link to a smartphone that persuades the victim to tap and activate — or activates itself without any input, as in the most sophisticated “zero-click” hacks.
Infect: The spyware captures and copies the phone’s most basic functions, NSO marketing materials show, recording from the cameras and microphone and collecting location data, call logs and contacts.
Track: The implant secretly reports that information to an operative who can use it to map out sensitive details of the victim’s life.
Read more about why it’s hard to protect yourself from hacks.

An early pitch, by company co-founder Omri Lavie, was made in June 2014 to the Drug Enforcement Administration, according to emails revealed through a Freedom of Information Act request and first reported by the tech news site Motherboard. The DEA found it too expensive, and records searches show no contract was signed. The agency declined to comment.

In the years afterward, Westbridge crossed the country in hopes of striking deals with the San Diego and Los Angeles police departments, pitching demos and sending brochures that said it could secretly turn smartphones into an “intelligence gold mine.”

A San Diego police sergeant told the company in a 2016 email that while it sounded “awesome,” the department couldn’t afford “such a large-scale project.” Officials at that agency and the LAPD told The Post that the tool was never purchased or used.

NSO had better luck recruiting major U.S. political figures to help secure contracts.

Between 2015 and 2017, NSO’s parent company, OSY Technologies, and a previous owner, Francisco Partners, paid roughly $100,000 to Michael Flynn, the former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency and future national security adviser to Donald Trump, for what Flynn said was “consulting” work in financial disclosure forms he filed with the Office of Government Ethics in 2017. The filings offered no other details of the work, and NSO did not respond to a question about Flynn’s work. Flynn did not respond to requests for comment.

In late 2018, Lavie paid $170,000 to another member of Trump’s orbit, Jeff Miller, to lobby members of Congress on “immigration and naturalization” issues, a federal disclosure filing shows. The Republican operative was paid by Lavie Management Co., which is also named on the deed for Lavie’s $4 million New Jersey mansion. NSO did not respond to a question about the payment, and Miller did not respond to requests for comment.

In 2019, after a Saudi dissident filed a lawsuit in Israel accusing NSO of helping surveil Khashoggi before his death, the company embarked on a VIP spending spree in hopes of cleaning up its reputation, announcing it had hired three senior advisers to help the company “continue its work to assist governments in fighting serious crime and terrorism”: Tom Ridge, the United States’ first homeland security secretary; Gérard Araud, France’s former ambassador to the United States; and Juliette Kayyem, a Department of Homeland Security official under President Barack Obama.

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This part jumped out at me when I was reading this.

The rest of story is in next post.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Part 2
Criticism over that role led Kayyem, now a CNN national security analyst, to back out as a contributor to The Post’s opinion section. Kayyem said she had worked to help ensure NSO’s spy tool “protected and respected” human rights and told The Post this month that she only served as an adviser on company policies and conducted no government work. (All three no longer work with the company, citing short-term contracts.) Ridge and Araud did not respond to requests for comment.

The company also hired SKDK, a public relations firm widely used in Democratic campaigns, to defend its “commitment to an ethical business framework.” The firm’s co-founder, Anita Dunn, was a communications director for Obama’s White House and now works as a senior adviser to President Biden. The firm, which worked with NSO for less than a year in 2019, declined to comment. The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

NSO’s parent, OSY, which is headquartered in Luxembourg, also paid Obama’s homeland security secretary, Jeh Johnson, to review the company’s new Human Rights Policy. Johnson, a partner at the elite law firm Paul, Weiss, gave his stamp of approval, saying it appeared to be “substantially aligned” with United Nations principles. An official U.N. expert was less celebratory, saying it did not address the “legacy of harm perpetuated as a result of NSO Group’s failure to ensure that its technology is used responsibly.” Johnson declined to comment.

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When WhatsApp sued NSO on accusations that it had helped hack 1,400 of the messaging app’s users, NSO enlisted another influential law firm, King & Spalding, to lead its legal defense. Among the company’s advisers: Rod J. Rosenstein, Trump’s deputy attorney general from 2017 to 2019, during which he decried the “lawless” attack on Khashoggi and oversaw the FBI. Rosenstein did not respond to requests for comment.

Q Cyber Technologies, which NSO says it is a subsidiary of, has also benefited from the legal services of Dan Jacobson, whom the Biden
administration in March named general counsel for the Office of Administration, financial disclosure filings show. A White House official said Jacobson has no current involvement with the company. The White House and the law firm did not respond to requests for comment.

Q Cyber also signed a $120,000-a-month contract in late 2019 with Mercury Public Affairs, a firm that employs former members of Congress as lobbyists for companies such as the U.S. subsidiary of Hikvision, a Chinese surveillance giant the Biden administration has accused of supporting China’s military.

In Justice Department filings in January, Mercury said it provided Q Cyber “strategic consulting” and “crisis management” services related to ongoing or future litigation or regulatory action. Mercury listed dozens of NSO-related emails and interviews with journalists in the last half of 2020, including from Ian McCaleb, a Mercury managing director who once worked for the Justice Department’s criminal division. Mercury and McCaleb did not respond to requests for comment.

Westbridge is registered as an active U.S. federal contractor, though no contracts can be found in government spending data. Its Maryland branch was dissolved in 2019, and its Virginia branch has only one name on its business filing: Adam Hanasky, a lawyer who said he is no longer associated with the firm.

Much about NSO’s U.S. presence, however, remains a mystery. NSO’s parent OSY said Westbridge lost $30,000 in 2016 and 2017 but made a total of $700,000 in profit in 2018 and 2019, according to business records in Luxembourg. The filings could not be independently confirmed and do not say where the money came from.

NSO said in a statement that Westbridge is “part of the NSO group.” But Stephen Rodriguez, who said he joined Westbridge as chairman of the board last month, said the company has no current involvement with NSO and works with other companies owned by Novalpina Capital, the London-based private equity firm that owns a majority stake in NSO.

Westbridge and NSO, he said, are both subsidiaries of OSY but operate as separate companies. Westbridge, he said, is now used to “support Novalpina business development in North and South America” around cybersecurity, public safety and defense contracts.

The Pegasus Project is a collaborative investigation that involves more than 80 journalists from 17 news organizations coordinated by Forbidden Stories with the technical support of Amnesty International’s Security Lab. Read more about this project
The Washington Post has a lot that came out about this.
 
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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/19/technology/facebook-misinformation-blind-spot.html
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SAN FRANCISCO — At the start of the pandemic, a group of data scientists at Facebook held a meeting with executives to ask for resources to help measure the prevalence of misinformation about Covid-19 on the social network.

The data scientists said figuring out how many Facebook users saw false or misleading information would be complex, perhaps taking a year a more, according to two people who participated in the meeting. But they added that by putting some new hires on the project and reassigning some existing employees to it, the company could better understand how incorrect facts about the virus spread on the platform.

The executives never approved the resources, and the team was never told why, according to the people, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters.

Now, more than a year later, Facebook has been caught in a firestorm about the very type of information that the data scientists were hoping to track.

The White House and other federal agencies have pressed the company to hand over data about how anti-vaccine narratives spread online, and have accused Facebook of withholding key information. President Biden on Friday accused the company of “killing people” by allowing false information to circulate widely. On Monday, he walked that back slightly, instead directing blame at people who originate falsehoods.

“Anyone listening to it is getting hurt by it,” Mr. Biden said. He said he hoped that instead of “taking it personally,” Facebook would “do something about the misinformation.”

The company has responded with statistics on how many posts containing misinformation it has removed, as well as how many Americans it has directed to factual information about the government’s pandemic response. In a blog post on Saturday, Facebook asked the Biden administration to stop “finger-pointing,” and casting blame on Facebook after missing its goal of vaccinating 70 percent of American adults by July 4.

“Facebook is not the reason this goal was missed,” Guy Rosen, Facebook’s vice president of integrity, said in the post.

But the pointed back-and-forth struck an uncomfortable chord for the company: It doesn’t actually know many specifics about how misinformation about the coronavirus and the vaccines to combat it have spread. That blind spot has reinforced concerns among misinformation researchers over Facebook’s selective release of data, and how aggressively — or not — the company has studied misinformation on its platform.

“The suggestion we haven’t put resources toward combating Covid misinformation and supporting the vaccine rollout is just not supported by the facts,” said Dani Lever, a Facebook spokeswoman. “With no standard definition for vaccine misinformation, and with both false and even true content (often shared by mainstream media outlets) potentially discouraging vaccine acceptance, we focus on the outcomes — measuring whether people who use Facebook are accepting of Covid-19 vaccines.”

Executives at Facebook, including its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, have said the company committed to removing Covid-19 misinformation since the start of the pandemic. The company said it had removed over 18 million pieces of Covid-19 misinformation since the start of the pandemic.

Experts who study disinformation said the number of pieces that Facebook removed was not as informative as how many were uploaded to the site, or in which groups and pages people were seeing the spread of misinformation.

“They need to open up the black box that is their content ranking and content amplification architecture. Take that black box and open it up for audit by independent researchers and government,” said Imran Ahmed, chief executive of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a nonprofit that aims to combat disinformation. “We don’t know how many Americans have been infected with misinformation.”

Mr. Ahmed’s group, using publicly available data from CrowdTangle, a Facebook-owned program, found that 12 people were responsible for 65 percent of the Covid-19 misinformation on Facebook. The White House, including Mr. Biden, has repeated that figure in the past week. Facebook says it disagrees with the characterization of the “disinformation dozen,” adding that some of their pages and accounts were removed, while others no longer post content that violate Facebook’s rules.

Renée DiResta, a disinformation researcher at Stanford’s Internet Observatory, called on Facebook to release more granular data, which would allow experts to understand how false claims about the vaccine were affecting specific communities within the country. The information, which is known as “prevalence data,” essentially looks at how widespread a narrative is, such as what percentage of people in a community on the service see it.

“The reason more granular prevalence data is needed is that false claims don’t spread among all audiences equally,” Ms. DiResta said. “In order to effectively counter specific false claims that communities are seeing, civil society organization and researchers need a better sense of what is happening within those groups.”

Many employees within Facebook have made the same argument. Brian Boland, a former Facebook vice president in charge of partnerships strategy, told CNN on Sunday that he had argued while at the company that it should publicly share as much information as possible. When asked about the dispute with the White House over Covid misinformation, he said, “Facebook has that data.”

“They look at it,” Mr. Boland. But he added: “Do they look at it the right way? Are they investing in the teams as fully as they should?”

Mr. Boland’s comments were widely repeated as evidence that Facebook has the requested data but is not sharing it. He did not respond to a request for comment from The New York Times, but one of the data scientists who pushed inside Facebook for deeper study of coronavirus misinformation said the problem was more about whether and how the company studied the data.

Technically, the person said, the company has data on all content that moves through its platforms. But measuring and tracking Covid misinformation first requires defining and labeling what qualifies as misinformation, something the person said the company had not dedicated resources toward.

Some at Facebook have suggested the government, or health officials, should be the ones who define misinformation. Only once that key baseline is set can data scientists begin to build out systems known as qualifiers, which measure the spread of certain information.

Given the billions of individual pieces of content posted to Facebook daily, the undertaking of measuring, tracking and ultimately calculating the prevalence of misinformation would be a huge task, the person said.

The meeting held at the start of the pandemic was not the only time Facebook had internal discussions about how to track misinformation.

Members of Facebook’s communications team raised the question of prevalence as well, telling executives last summer and fall that it would be useful for disputing articles by journalists who used CrowdTangle to write articles about the spread of anti-vaccine misinformation, according to a Facebook employee involved in those discussions.

After the 2016 presidential election, Mr. Zuckerberg sought a similar statistic on how much “fake news” Americans had seen leading up to it, a member of Facebook’s communications team said. One week after the vote, Mr. Zuckerberg published a blog postsaying the false news had amounted to “less than 1 percent,” but the company did not clarify that estimate or give more details despite being pressed by reporters.

Months later, Adam Mosseri, a Facebook executive who was then the head of NewsFeed, said part of the problem was that “fake news means different things to different people.”
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
I'm not sure about the title of this story.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/08/17/michelle-fiscus-muzzle-paid-credit-card/
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Michelle Fiscus met with state investigators in July to report the suspicious package mailed to her office containing a silicone dog muzzle.
During the meeting, the then-medical director of Tennessee’s immunization program told agents she suspected the Amazon package from an unknown sender was a “veiled threat.” The muzzle, she said, was meant to make her “stop talking about vaccinating people.”

But just a few weeks after the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security was first notified about the package, state agents learned the muzzle was purchased with a credit card under Fiscus’s name, according to a department report obtained by The Washington Post. (The findings were first reported by Axios.)

“At this time, there appears to be no threat toward Dr. Fiscus associated with receipt of the dog muzzle,” investigator Mario Vigil wrote in the report, which was released Monday.

The case is now closed, a spokesperson with the agency told The Post in an email.

Fiscus has denied purchasing the muzzle, tweeting Monday that her “credit card was charged with the incorrect billing address — my state work office — to an Amazon account I didn’t know existed.”

“No, I didn’t send it to myself,” Fiscus added.

In an email to The Post early Tuesday, Fiscus said Tennessee’s Department of Safety and Homeland Security had denied her request to obtain a subpoena to determine who opened the Amazon account used to make the order. (Amazon’s founder, Jeff Bezos, owns The Post.)

“I requested the inquiry from Homeland Security regarding the muzzle and was told it was not a credible threat that warranted a subpoena,” Fiscus said. “I have requested the unredacted report from the agent and was told to contact their legal office, which we have done. From what I can tell from the report, a second Amazon account was opened under my name and linked to my credit card.”

Fiscus, who was fired from the Tennessee Department of Health in mid-July, days after the muzzle was mailed to her office, emerged as a contentious figure during her time as the state’s top immunization official after she proposed that teenagers be allowed to receive doses of coronavirus vaccines without parental consent. The health department released a memo saying Fiscus was fired for lacking interpersonal communication skills, showing poor management and attempting to give funds to a nonprofit she founded, the Nashville Post reported.

Fiscus denied those claims, arguing that her dismissal was politically motivated and that, like several other public health officials, she was “vilified” by angry Republican lawmakers for promoting science.

“This is about … people in power in Tennessee not believing in the importance in vaccinating the people, and so they terminated the person in charge of getting it done,” Fiscus told The Post at the time.

Health official fired in retaliation for coronavirus vaccine guidance for teens, she says

The muzzle arrived at Fiscus’s office on July 2, the report states. She opened the envelope four days later, initially assuming a colleague sent it as a prank, Fiscus told investigators.

She later became concerned about her safety after her colleague denied sending the muzzle, the report states. Fiscus then shared copies of emails sent by state residents who opposed her stance on child vaccinations.

One email read: “As a parent of 3 children in the state of Tennessee, I am putting you on notice that we will be holding you accountable for any adverse effects or deaths on children brought on you by pushing an agenda of an experimental therapy on an age group whose chances of being [affected] by this virus are zero. ZERO!”

The same day Fiscus met with state investigators, one of the agents contacted Amazon to get more information about the package’s sender, the report states. The Amazon employee told investigators Fiscus appeared to be both the receiver and the sender. But Fiscus denied shipping herself the muzzle in a follow-up meeting with investigators. She pulled up her Amazon account purchase history, which did not reveal the muzzle, the report states.

That day, Fiscus also contacted her husband and daughter in front of state agents. Both family members stated they had not ordered the muzzle, according to the report.

It wasn’t until a judge signed a subpoena ordering Amazon to provide more details about the sender’s account that investigators learned “the account which the muzzle had been purchased on was in Dr. Fiscus’s name and had been opened in March 2021.”

A judge later signed a second subpoena ordering Amazon to disclose information on all Amazon accounts belonging to Fiscus, the report states.

When Amazon turned over those details on Aug. 7, the report adds, authorities found Fiscus had two Amazon accounts in her name. The first account matched the one she had shown investigators during their interview. The second account — from which the muzzle was purchased — had an American Express credit card under her name listed as the payment method, the report states.

The same credit card is associated with Fiscus’s other Amazon account, the report adds.

In the statement Fiscus provided to The Post, she said the Amazon account used to order the muzzle “appears to have been set up with a ‘burner phone’ using a service we don’t have and from Washington State, where I had not been.”

Brad Fiscus, her husband, told WPLN-FM last week the couple plans to relocate to Virginia amid escalating tensions over masks and vaccines in Tennessee.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/08/18/taliban-social-media-success/
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For a group that espouses ancient moral codes, the Afghan Taliban has used strikingly sophisticated social media tactics to build political momentum and, now that they’re in power, to make a public case that they’re ready to lead a modern nation state after nearly 20 years of war.

In accounts swelling across Facebook, Twitter and Instagram — and in group chats on apps such as WhatsApp and Telegram — the messaging from Taliban supporters typically challenges the West’s dominant image of the group as intolerant, vicious and bent on revenge, while staying within the evolving boundaries of taste and content that tech companies use to police user behavior.

The tactics overall show such a high degree of skill that analysts believe at least one public relations firm is advising the Taliban on how to push key themes, amplify messages across platforms and create potentially viral images and video snippets — much like corporate and political campaigns do across the world.

One image from a video circulated online in Afghanistan shows Taliban fighters dressed in camouflage and brandishing machines guns while posing unmolested in an eastern province, not far from Kabul, under a gorgeous pink and blue sky. The text below, in Pashto and English, reads, “IN AN ATMOSPHERE OF FREEDOM.”

Wide distribution of such propaganda imagery would have been almost impossible for an insurgent movement there a generation ago, before the arrival of smartphones, Internet connections and free social media services brought unprecedented online reach to Afghanistan. The nation lags the world in Internet connectivity but it has grown sharply over the past decade amid a gush of international investment.

But the audience for much — and perhaps most — of what Taliban supporters push on social media is clearly international. That includes Afghans living in other countries, potential supporters abroad and even the profoundly skeptical Western powers that have poured trillions of dollars into attempting to create a durable, Western-style democracy in Afghanistan since a U.S.-led invasion ousted the Taliban in 2001. The official Afghan Taliban website offers versions in Pashto, Dari, Arabic, Urdu and English.
Only the first two are widely spoken in most of Afghanistan.

Recent months have seen an uptick in online messages offering a gentler, more reassuring face of the Taliban, whose brutality during its previous reign over the nation was notorious, featuring mass executions, repressive moral codes and the exclusion of women from schools and workplaces.

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“The Islamic Emirate has ordered its Mujahideen and once again instructs them that no one is allowed to enter anyone’s house without permission,” Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen tweeted on Sunday. “Life, property and honor of none shall be harmed but must be protected by the Mujahedeen.”

Shaheen has more than 350,000 Twitter followers.

“The Taliban of today is immensely savvy with technology and social media — nothing like the group it was 20 years ago,” said Rita Katz, executive director of SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors online extremism.

Analysts caution that claims of a more evolved and tolerant Taliban should not be taken at face value at a time when a movement that once hosted Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda reintroduces itself to a skeptical world. The Taliban espouses a profoundly traditional notion of Islam, one that has many Afghans with more modern views fleeing in terror by any means possible.

At the same time, the ability of the Taliban and its supporters to operate substantially within the rules of companies such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube has left Silicon Valley vulnerable to intensifying political crosscurrents: U.S. conservatives have been demanding to know why former president Donald Trump has been banned from Twitter while various Taliban figures have not.

The answer, analysts said, may simply be that Trump’s posts for years challenged platform rules against hate speech and inciting violence. Today’s Taliban, by and large, does not.

“The Taliban is clearly threading the needle regarding social media content policies and is not yet crossing the very distinct policy-violating lines that Trump crossed,” Katz said.

Katz cautioned, however, that “this doesn’t mean at all that the Taliban shouldn’t be removed from social media, because the waves of propaganda and messaging it is spreading — permissible as it may seem by some content policy standards — is fueling a newly emboldened and extremely dangerous global Islamist militant movement.”

A once-vanquished insurgent returns as Afghanistan’s likely next leader

The challenge for American technology companies is complicated by shifting geopolitics as the Taliban takes control, amid divergent designations by even the U.S. government itself. While the State Department has designated the Pakistani Taliban a foreign terrorist organization, it has not applied the same label to the Afghan Taliban. The Afghan Taliban, however, are listed as a sanctioned entity under rulings from the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

Citing those rulings, Facebook has designated the Taliban a “dangerous organization,” giving it a policy-based lever to pull when it chooses to remove accounts — no matter what the specific posts say. The company even closed down a popular hotline this week that the Taliban had set up on Facebook-owned WhatsApp for people to report incidents of violence, looting and other attacks.

Daniel Knowles, a foreign correspondent for the Economist magazine, noted on Twitter that such WhatsApp setups were common even before the Taliban took power. “I am slightly annoyed I didn’t write about these WhatsApp helplines ages ago,” he said after the Financial Times first reported that the hotline had been shut down. “But when I heard about them, they weren’t ‘helplines’. It was more just, your local Taliban were reachable by WhatsApp, and if you called, they would resolve disputes. It’s just how they govern.”

A person familiar with Facebook’s deliberations, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk freely, said Facebook recognizes that U.S. sanctions date to the administration of President George W. Bush and has sought additional guidance from OFAC. In the past, OFAC has created carveouts to the sanction lists for special cases.

YouTube also cited compliance with U.S. sanctions in affirming that it will continue to remove accounts “believed to be owned and operated by the Afghan Taliban.”

But Twitter, among some other companies, is allowing the Afghan Taliban more leeway by not removing accounts purporting to speak for it. And U.S. officials in public comments have been careful to note that the administration has made no decision regarding recognizing the Taliban government, or not.

“We are still taking stock of what has transpired over the past 72 hours and the diplomatic and political implications of that,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters Monday.

The Taliban, like other Islamist movements such as the Islamic State and al-Qaeda, long saw opportunity in turning the West’s communication technologies against it — while showing an agility that sometimes frustrated those charged with shutting down or blunting its messages.

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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://theconversation.com/inside-the-warped-world-of-incel-extremists-166142
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In trying to understand what prompted a man in Plymouth, England to commit the worst mass shooting in the UK for over a decade, attention has turned to his apparent links with the incel community – an online subculture of people who describe themselves as “involuntary celibates”.

Jake Davison allegedly shot his mother before a shooting spree which ended when he turned the gun on himself. His youngest victim was three years old. In the lead-up to the attacks, he compared himself to incels in YouTube videos and contributed to their forums.

He uploaded videos in which he fixated on his virginity and, in a direct reference to incel ideology, Davison’s described himself as “blackpilled”. This means that he believed himself too old, at 22, to find love.

What is an incel?

Incels refuse to accept responsibility for their circumstances, instead believing their inability to attract women makes them victims of oppression. Like all groups under the umbrella of online misogyny known as the “manosphere”, they subscribe to the “red pill” conspiracy theory. They believe men are the true victims of gendered oppression, that male power has been usurped, and that feminism is a front to disguise men’s subjugation.

Incels essentialise this conspiracy in the idea of the “black pill”. To swallow the black pill is to accept that this oppression is insurmountable. It invokes a certain hopelessness. Incels believe there is nothing they can ever do to improve their lives.

Incels believe in a genetically essentialist social hierarchy. At the apex are “chads” – hyper-athletic attractive males who women desire instinctively.
Beneath them are descending classes of “betas”. At the lowermost point are incels, whose innate characteristics make them unable to attract women. Height-cels say they are too short; skull and frame-cels blame their skeletal structure; wrist-cels believe their wrists are too thin; and there are many more delineations. Incels cannot accept responsibility for their lot in life, instead spinning themselves as victims of their own biology and societal oppression.

Targeting women

Incels blame women for this hierarchy and their low place within it. The culture portrays women as irrational and emotional creatures who are blindly pursuing the biological imperatives to seek sexual satisfaction and material security through marriage.

Incels believe women select different men for these functions, marrying an inferior “beta” for financial gain whilst cheating with “chads” for sexual gratification. To incels, women pursue their interests sociopathically and will not hesitate to harm men. A society dominated by women does the same and incels see their oppression as a natural consequence of women’s malicious and inhuman nature.

Nowhere is this expressed more bizarrely than the widely held incel belief in the “dogpill”. This is the view that women’s drive for sexual satisfaction is such that they will routinely have sex with large dogs. Absurdity is the point here. Women are portrayed as so depraved that they are undeserving of rights and bodily autonomy.

Incels call for women to be stripped of their rights and be forced to serve as state-mandated girlfriends or held in concentration camps. Incels see themselves as the sexless victims of women’s nature, and call for them to be contained or controlled accordingly.

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Incels subscribe to the ‘red pill’ conspiracy theory, believing men are the true victims of gendered oppression.

The “black pill” refers to the oppression of incels at the hands of biologically malevolent women. In various online cultures, to take the black pill is to give up hope. And in incel culture specifically, it is to give up hope of ever having sex or a genuine romantic connection. Because they believe attractiveness is genetically determined, there is no hope for incels to rise in the hierarchy. They will be forever denied sex and happiness, and are doomed to be women’s victims. Nihilistic despair and dogmatic hopelessness permeates incel communities and it is from this that violence flows.

Death and violence

Given that the alternative is to languish in unceasing oppression, incel ideology legitimises violence against practically any target. Incel forums simultaneously glorify suicide whilst justifying extreme violence against women as a noble reaction to female domination. Violence is an ideological response; a means to punish women for their perceived crimes and reclaim what has been usurped. Incel ideology is necessarily violent because there is no hope, only revenge.

For some time, the wider world has instinctively dismissed what is, admittedly, a childish ideology based on crude stereotypes and nonsensical concepts. Sadly this is no longer an option. Plymouth is not the first shooting linked to incels. Californian Elliot Rodger, a self-described “kissless virgin,” killed six in 2014 as “revenge” against those who denied him sex. Incel communities venerate Rodger as a saint to this day.

In Toronto, Canada, Alek Minassian was convicted of murdering ten people with a van in 2018. He hailed Rodger online minutes prior to the attack. Recent attacks in Canada, Arizona and Germany have also been linked to incels, while a planned attackin Ohio was discovered only days before Plymouth. There are many more examples, and some are calling for the Plymouth shooting to be classified as an act of terror.

Although not obviously political, incel ideology revolves around imagined subjugation, and violence is intended to have a far-reaching social impact. Rodger hoped to “deliver a devastating blow” that would shake women to “the core of their wicked hearts”. Minassian fantasised of an “incel rebellion” that would overthrow the corrupt social order and return women to their proper place.

Few incels believe this is actually feasible, but allegiance to the principle motivates violence intended to strike at the social order and harm women as a distinct class. This is why the extreme violence of the incel community should be considered terrorism.

Incel terrorism has spiked over the last decade and there is every indication this community is growing. If this most recent attack was motivated by incel ideology, it was neither the first nor likely to be the last. For all their warped concepts and ideological incoherence, incels are becoming a threat we must take seriously.
 
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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
and the crazies keep getting crazier...smh
Ah the internet.

Brings us the ability to tease out whatever particular flavor of crazy someone is likely to be radicalized to, and the means to nudge them into thinking that they are the sane ones for thinking their radicalized bullshit.
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Ah the internet.

Brings us the ability to tease out whatever particular flavor of crazy someone is likely to be radicalized to, and the means to nudge them into thinking that they are the sane ones for thinking their radicalized bullshit.
yeah the internet.....the worst double edge sword to be created....on one side it was supposed to free us and help, and on the other war, of the 1's and 0's, and the radicalization of people and thought......sometimes dunno which is worse....
 
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