In three exhaustive
hearings this week, executives from Facebook, Twitter and Google acknowledged
that their platforms were used by Russia to try and create division over such
disparate issues as immigration, gun control and politics.
House
investigators released a trove of Facebook and Twitter ads that showed just how
extraordinary the cyber intrusion was.
The
companies' admissions and disclosures gave congressional investigators one of
their first real wins in the Russia probes. They have been frustrated by delays
- and overshadowed by special counsel Robert Mueller - since they launched
probes into Russian interference in the 2016 election earlier this year.
Initially dismissive of Russia's threat, all three companies have pledged
improvements since lawmakers ramped up pressure and called them to testify.
It's
unclear what next steps Congress will take. The top Democrat on the Senate intelligence
panel, Virginia Sen. Mark Warner, has co-sponsored legislation that would bring
political ad rules from TV, radio and print to the internet. Warner calls it
"the lightest touch possible," but many Republicans have been
lukewarm.
California
Rep. Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House intelligence panel, said he
thinks such advertising regulations for social media are
"inevitable," but noted that many of the fixes will come down to the
companies' own social responsibility.
"Congress
isn't going to prescribe an algorithm, so there are limits to what we can
feasibly do," Schiff said after his committee's hearing Wednesday.
The
few dozen ads, seen by vast sums of people, encouraged street demonstrations
against Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton and fostered support and opposition to
Bernie Sanders, Muslims, gays, blacks and the icons of the Civil Rights
movement.
The
ads underscore how foreign agents sought to sow confusion, anger and discord
among Americans through messages on hot-button topics. U.S. intelligence
services say the Russian use of social media was part of a broad effort to sway
the 2016 presidential election in favor of Trump. Mueller is investigating
whether the Kremlin worked with the Trump campaign to influence the election.
Many
of the ads also show careful targeting, with messages geared toward particular
audiences. One ad, aimed at those with interests in civil rights and their
leaders, highlights a man who claims to be Bill Clinton's illegitimate son.
Another video parodying Trump was targeted at blacks who also are interested in
BlackNews.com, HuffPost Politics or HuffPost Black Voices.
In
preparation for hearings this week, Facebook disclosed that content generated
by a Russian group, the Internet Research Agency, potentially reached as many
as 126 million users. Company executives said that going forward they would
verify political ad buyers in federal elections, requiring them to reveal
correct names and locations. The site will also create new graphics where users
can click on the ads and find out more about who's behind them.
But
that did not prevent hours of questioning during two days of hearings, with
lawmakers expressing exasperation at the seeming inability to thwart foreign
intervention.
At
one point, Sen. Al Franken put his head in his hands after he couldn't get all
the companies to commit to not accepting political ads bought with foreign
currency. Several ads touting Facebook pages called "Back the Badge,"
''Being Patriotic," ''Blacktivist," ''South United" and
"Woke Blacks" were labeled as being paid for in rubles using Qiwi, a
Moscow-based payment provider that aims to serve "the new generation in
Russia" and former Russian republics, according to the company's website.
"Google
has all knowledge that man has ever developed," the Minnesota Democrat
said. "You can't put together rubles with a political ad and go like,
'Hmmm, those data points spell out something pretty bad?' "
Besides
the ads released by lawmakers on the House intelligence committee, Democrats on
the panel also released four tweets from RT, a Russian state-sponsored
television network, and nearly 3,000 Twitter handles active during the final
months of the election.
Taken
together, they show how actual news events and stories helped shape
surreptitious Russian messaging.
One
advertisement cited a real October 2016 news story - about a gunman's battle
with Boston police officers - then used it to attack Hillary Clinton as
"the main hardliner against cops" and to promote Trump as the
candidate who can "defend the police from terrorists."
Three
of the tweets referenced Clinton, including one that linked to an RT story
about the release of a batch of hacked emails from her campaign chairman, John
Podesta.
Some
34,000 Trump supporters were shown an ad calling for Clinton's removal from the
ballot, citing "dynastic succession of the Clinton family" as a
breach of core principles laid out by the Founding Fathers. Clicking on it took
Facebook users to a petition at WhiteHouse.gov.
Though
U.S. intelligence officials believe the social media effort was aimed at aiding
Trump, there are other indications it was intended to sow general divisions.
One ad promoted a Nov. 12 anti-Trump rally in New York City, titled "Not My President." Large anti-Trump rallies actually did take place around the country that day in major American cities. That doesn't mean the Russian accounts planned the events, but rather that they were piggybacking on existing protests and promoting them to like-minded people.
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