The Kremlin itself has said that it has doubled media spending €630 million last year to €1.2 billion this year. And to give just one example, there's the case of the St Petersburg "troll factory", where a group (of perhaps 300 people) of Internet users helping the Kremlin shape public opinion on social networks.The news / rumours on "Russian trolls" started in earnest when the crisis in Syria evolved and took a step up with the Ukraine crisis. The main thing which I noticed wasn't actual Russian propaganda but rather people being deemed Russian trolls when ever something was posted which wasn't necessarily negative about Russia. — Gooseone
One has to understand that here Russia is quite opportunist. It will support anything that basically erodes the EU ...or NATO. Hence it's not that all supported groups are Putins puppets. Some have closer connections, others not so. And basically Russian policy has hit a nerve as it can use the anti-EU sentiment that exists (which surely isn't just fabricated By Russia) for it's own aims.If elections start in Germany next year and there's a lot of news pointing to "active measures", is the beneficiary of such measures automatically the wrong vote? — Gooseone
I think it was in 2006 that I suggested making it possible to sue politicians and newspapers for stating incorrect facts. — Benkei
Well my point was this...
In theory traditional news media was not biased by design even if it becomes somewhat biased in practice. — m-theory
Actually there are two things here.I was observing that you appear to be framing your observations in a way which makes it appear that such ways of manufacturing consent are wrong by definition and that you're implying (by specifically not mentioning western media outlets being susceptible to the same tendencies) that it's mainly wrong "If 'they' do it". — Gooseone
That's a good point that I agree with. When someone makes totally false statements or gives fake news, many people still think there is some truth to it. This then actually make disinformation campaigns successfull. Because usually we accept that some news might be a little bit biased, but not utterly fabricated. And a disinformation campaign's goal can also be just to create confusion.I'm invested in being able to dissect false news, actual truth probably does not even lie in the middle. — Gooseone
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