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Fake news evolved into fake events, and the consequences are scary

Fake news evolved into fake events, and the consequences are scary

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An ongoing influence campaign is undermining our shared reality

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Activists Demonstrate In Lower Manhattan On Day Of Gov’t Deadline To Reunite Detained Immigrant Children With Their Parents
Activists rally against the Trump administration’s immigration policies outside the New York City offices of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement last month. An influence campaign possibly organized by Russia has been promoting similar events on Facebook
Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Some days, it seems like any number of topics might lead The Interface. Other days, nearly every major outlet in our orbit writes a version of the same story. Thursday was one of the latter: Facebook’s removal of probably Russian disinformation has tripped up scores of real-life American activists, causing legitimate protests to be removed from the service, and we’re only beginning to consider the implications.

The activists were caught up in Facebook’s announcement earlier this week that it had removed 32 pages, with more than 290,000 followers, after discovering that they were part of a secret campaign to influence American politics. Facebook reported at the time that these accounts were harder to find than the Russian agents of the 2016 election campaign. The people who created them took creative steps to make their accounts look authentic. It’s one reason why Facebook can’t say definitively that the current influence campaign is Russian in origin, though there are strong signals that it is.

One way fake accounts can look authentic is by associating with real ones. According to activists in the above-linked stories, that’s just what happened here. When Facebook discovered the subterfuge, it removed public events created by the fakers, even though thousands of Americans had registered to attend.

You can understand why Facebook would remove events and posts that had been created as part of a mind-warping influence campaign — and you can also probably understand why protesters are so upset. Here’s Tony Romm, Elizabeth Dwoskin and Eli Rosenberg in the Post:

Facebook has “delegitimized our whole event — and all the work that folks across the D.C. area have put a lot of time and effort into,” said Caleb-Michael Files, an organizer of the March to Confront White Supremacy, a group that was organized after the Charlottesville protests, and a co-host of the counterprotest event page. He said he was much angrier at the social network than at Russia. “Russians might have been there, but Russians are not creating and invoking these feelings. These are real feelings, not Internet-created feelings.”

Two of the events removed by Facebook during its investigation
Two of the events removed by Facebook during its investigation

At TechCrunch, Taylor Hatmaker has the story of Andrew Batcher, a Washington-based activist who’s part of an anti-hate group called Shut It Down DC. Batcher’s group became a co-host of a planned protest of the sequel to last year’s deadly Unite the Right rally, which is scheduled for later this month. The event was created by someone who was hiding their identity, but Batcher’s group filled it with legitimate posts:

“When we started organizing we talked about making a Facebook page and saw that this already existed,” Batcher said. “It happens pretty regularly in DC knowing how many major events take a place here.

“We asked to be made co-hosts of the event and we put our stuff up on it basically,” Batcher said. That included video calls to action, photos and other content, including the event description. “Everything that was taken down was ours.”

As a strategy for sowing chaos, fake events appear to be every bit the equal of fake news. As Sam Woolley, director of digital intelligence at the think tank Institute for the Future, asked the Journal: “What’s real grass-roots activity versus fake grass-roots activity?” he asked.

Five months ago, Charlie Warzel wrote of the threat of an Infocalypse: a moment when fact can no longer reliably, separated from fiction. A world in which every protest comes under suspicion of having been organized by shadowy, unseen forces would seem to herald the arrival of such a moment. As Kevin Roose put it in the Times:

A side effect of the disinformation campaigns is that they make social media as a whole seem inherently untrustworthy, and give fodder to those who want to cast doubt on the legitimacy of authentic movements. Already, some partisans have adopted the tactic of sowing doubt about internet-based movements by painting their opponents as Russian trolls or agents of a foreign-influence campaign.

This type of suspicion appears likely to grow, as influence campaigns get harder and harder to distinguish from authentic activity.

For activists, there are clear lessons to be learned: Be careful whose online protests you promote. Insist on a video chat with that new suspiciously eager protester who wants you to be an administer on their page. When they tell you they’re an American, ask to see the receipts.

For Facebook, the evolution of events into a major new attack surface has generated another thicket of difficult choices. Remove events and their related posts too aggressively and you’re stifling the speech you have promised to protect; be too lax in your enforcement and invite regulation and the continued decline of democracy. And whichever way you lean on a given day, loud voices will be there to tell you that you’re doing it all completely wrong.

Fake news can sow division and make you doubt the legitimacy of the articles you’re reading. Fake events go a step further, making you doubt the motives of everyone around you. They distract you from your objective and sap your energy. As a weapon of disinformation, they can be devilishly effective.

I started writing a daily newsletter last year in part because I wanted to see how disinformation would evolve for this year’s midterm elections. The emergence of fake events as the new fake news represents a significant new mutation. And it’s not clear that any of us are prepared for what comes next.

Democracy

Russia’s Other Troll Team

The Digital Forensics Research Lab does a close reading of special counsel Robert Mueller’s indictments of Russian agents and concludes that there’s a second group waging information warfare on social networks beyond the Kremlin’s famous Internet Research Agency:

The GRU campaign appears to have had two main goals: to mobilize American opinions, especially African-American opinions, against Clinton, and to spread propaganda which served Russian military interests.

It was much smaller and more focused than the Internet Research Agency operation. It seems to have worked much more closely with the hacking units, although its ability to amplify their leaks was limited. Above all, unlike the troll farm, it was conducted by serving officers in Russian military intelligence.

CEO of Twitter Jack Dorsey On Shadow Banning Allegations: “It’s Not Acceptable For Us To Create A Culture Like That”

Jack Dorsey sat down with Fox News Radio’s Guy Benson to address the ongoing, bad-faith allegations that Twitter is “shadow banning” conservatives.

DORSEY: The net of this is we need to do a much better job at explaining how our algorithms work. Ideally opening them up so that people can actually see how they work. This is not easy for anyone to do. In fact there’s a whole field of research in AI called ‘explainability’ that is trying to understand how to make algorithms explain how they make decisions in this criteria. We are subscribed to that research. We’re making sure that we can help lead it and fund it, but we’re a far way off. So in the meantime we just need to make sure that we’re pushing ourselves to explain exactly how these things work. How we’re making decisions. Where we need to make decisions as humans vs where the algorithms make decisions based on behaviors and signals.

Scoop: GOP House leader says Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey should testify

The GOP House leader wants to hold yet another hearing over “allegations that the platform limits the reach of some conservative accounts.” At this point, it’s hard to call these hearings anything other than an intimidation campaign against the social networks.

Google Developing News App for China

Wayne Ma and Juro Osawa have the scoop on a new, heavily censored “news” app that Google is developing. I am extremely interested in how Google is going to message its headlong rush into the Chinese market, where it will routinely be asked to aid and abet an authoritarian regime, often in the service of quashing dissent:

Google has been working on the app since last year and had been meeting with Chinese regulators to discuss the project, the people said. It is also preparing a mobile app for internet search in China that will comply with local censorship laws, an effort first reported Wednesday by The Intercept. The projects are part of an initiative code-named Dragonfly that marks a reversal for Google, which shut down its search engine in China eight years ago in dramatic fashion due to a growing crackdown on internet content by government authorities.

Elsewhere

Instagram CEO Kevin Systrom on winning the Stories war

Instagram’s clone of Snapchat stories turned 2 on Wednesday, and CEO Kevin Systrom took a short victory lap in the press. I really enjoy talking to Systrom — he’s wickedly smart, a very good listener, and makes no effort to hide his competitive streak. Sadly, our time together ended before he could make much news, but he did respond to last week’s investor freakout over the underperformance of stories advertising:

“Every brand-new format never monetizes as well as established formats,” he says. “That was true for online advertising for a long time. That was true of mobile advertising. There’s a certain maturity that happens over time, both with advertisers learning how to utilize the format, and we as a company are learning how to optimize the format so it delivers the most value to advertisers.”

The popular Musical.ly app has been rebranded as TikTok

Musical.ly was a big brand, with more than 200 million registered users around the world. The Chinese company Bytedance bought it last year, and in a head-scratcher, is eliminating the Musical.ly brand and collapsing it into a larger app it owns called TikTok. It seems risky and wasteful, but I know basically nothing about the Chinese social-media market. (Educate me!)

PSA: Automatic cross-posting of tweets to Facebook no longer works as of today

I can’t imagine anyone ever particularly enjoyed seeing tweets automatically posted to Twitter. “Wsers will instead have to copy a tweet’s URL if they want to share a tweet to Facebook going forward,” Sarah Perez reports. Don’t do this either!

Facebook kills automatic WordPress publishing to Profiles

Speaking of automatic posting, you can no longer post your WordPress blogs to Facebook. If you were doing this and it was working for you, please DM me.

The Next Step in our Journey to Help Local News Publishers

Facebook announced $4.5 million new money for programs that support news publishers. Most of the money goes to teach local publishers how to build digital subscriptions businesses. They’ll take it!

Launches

Facebook is making its first serious move to monetize WhatsApp

Due to an oversight, I forgot to include this important item from my colleague Shannon Liao in yesterday’s newsletter. Businesses can now pay to message users, opening up WhatsApp’s first real potential source of revenue — assuming anyone wants to interact with businesses in this way. Given the way that’s played out on Messenger, I’m skeptical. But I was also skeptical that WhatsApp’s brutalist take on Snapchat stories would succeed, and it’s now the most-used such format in the world. So I would believe anything about WhatsApp’s revenue opportunities, basically.

Facebook finally launches playable ads, improves game monetization

Mobile game advertisers can now create ads that you can play without first installing the game. Useful!

Takes

The Expensive Education of Mark Zuckerberg and Silicon Valley

Kara Swisher (disclosure: she is a friend and a personal hero and last night we went to go see Mission Impossible: Fallout together) makes her debut as a New York Times opinion columnist with a timely reflection on how social networks are belatedly waking up to the fact that they are the new “arms dealers”:

They have weaponized social media. They have weaponized the First Amendment. They have weaponized civic discourse. And they have weaponized, most of all, politics.

Which is why malevolent actors continue to game the platforms and why there’s still no real solution in sight anytime soon, because they were built to work exactly this way. And ever since, they have grown like some very pernicious kudzu and overtaken their inventors’ best efforts at control. Simply put, the inventors became overwhelmed by their own creations, which led to what I can only describe as a casual negligence, which led to where we are now.

And finally ...

Comcast wants you to use your phone less, then switch to its network

Part of me feels like I should have been prepared for the Comcast corporation (disclosure: an investor in Vox Media) to see the Time Well Spent movement as a content marketing opportunity, and create a web page promoting a “phone cleanse” that also serves as an advertisement for buying additional Comcast services.

Reader: I was not prepared:

Also, it should be noted that there’s a hard copy book of the phone cleanse. I don’t know why. But it exists, and you can tweet Xfinity Mobile to get one shipped to you for free.

The only cleanse I’ll be doing after reading this web page is a shower.

Talk to me

Send me questions, tips, encouragement, and fake invitations: casey@theverge.com