The Fake Americans Russia Created to Influence the Election - nyt
Sometimes an international offensive begins with a few shots that draw little notice. So it was last year when Melvin Redick of Harrisburg, Pa., a friendly-looking American with a backward baseball cap and a young daughter, posted on Facebook a link to a brand-new website.
These guys show hidden truth about Hillary Clinton, George Soros and other leaders of the US, he wrote on June 8, 2016. Visit #DCLeaks website. Its really interesting!
Mr. Redick turned out to be a remarkably elusive character. No Melvin Redick appears in Pennsylvania records, and his photos seem to be borrowed from an unsuspecting Brazilian. But this fictional concoction has earned a small spot in history: The Redick posts that morning were among the first public signs of an unprecedented foreign intervention in American democracy.
The DCLeaks site had gone live a few days earlier, posting the first samples of material, stolen from prominent Americans by Russian hackers, that would reverberate through the presidential election campaign and into the Trump presidency. The sites phony promoters were in the vanguard of a cyberarmy of counterfeit Facebook and Twitter accounts, a legion of Russian-controlled impostors whose operations are still being unraveled.
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The Russian information attack on the election did not stop with the hacking and leaking of Democratic emails or the fire hose of stories, true, false and in between, that battered Mrs. Clinton on Russian outlets like RT and Sputnik. Far less splashy, and far more difficult to trace, was Russias experimentation on Facebook and Twitter, the American companies that essentially invented the tools of social media and, in this case, did not stop them from being turned into engines of deception and propaganda.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/07/us/politics/russia-facebook-twitter-election.html?ref=todayspaper
kimbutgar
(20,882 posts)It was obvious they were fake. I got attacked a few times and when I called them out they disappeared as fake trolls their profiles were gone the next day. I got to the point that I wouldn't answer back an attack unless they were real. It's as if they found old faded pictures at a flea market or garage sales and used them.