Mueller Indictment -
The "Russian Influence" Is A Commercial Marketing Scheme
17 February, 2018
Yesterday
the Justice Department indicted the Russian Internet Research Agency on
some dubious legal grounds. It covers thirteen Russian people and three Russian
legal entities. The main count of the indictment is an alleged "Conspiracy
to Defraud the United States".
The
published indictment gives support to our long held believe that there was no
"Russian influence" campaign during the U.S. election. What is
described and denounced as such was instead a commercial marketing scheme which
ran click-bait websites to generate advertisement revenue and created online
crowds around virtual persona to promote whatever its commercial customers
wanted to promote.
The
indictment is fodder for the public to prove that the Mueller investigation is
"doing something". It is full of unproven assertions and assumptions.
It is a sham in that none of the Russian persons or companies indicted will
ever come in front of a U.S. court. That is bad because the indictment is build
on the theory of a new crime which, unless a court throws it out, can be used
to incriminate other people in other cases and might even apply to this blog.
The later part of this post will refer to that.
In the
early 1990s some dude in St.Petersburg made a good business selling hot dogs.
He then opened a colorful restaurant. He invited local celebrities and
politicians to gain notoriety while serving cheap food for too high prices. It
was a good business. A few years later he moved to Moscow and gained contracts
to cater to schools and to the military. The food he served was still
substandard.
But
catering bad food as school lunches gave him, by chance, the idea for a new business:
Parents were soon up
in arms. Their children wouldn’t eat the food, saying it smelled rotten.
As the
bad publicity mounted, Mr. Prigozhin’s company, Concord Catering, launched a
counterattack, a former colleague said. He hired young men and women to
overwhelm the internet with comments and blog posts praising the food and
dismissing the parents’ protests.
“In
five minutes, pages were drowning in comments,” said Andrei Ilin, whose website
serves as a discussion board about public schools. “And all the trolls were
supporting Concord.”
The
trick worked beyond expectations. Prigozhin had found a new business. He hired
some IT staff and low paid temps to populate various message boards, social
networks and the general internet with whatever his customers asked him for.
You
have a bad online reputation? Prigozhin can help. His internet company will
fill the net with positive stories and remarks about you. Your old and bad
reputation will be drowned by the new and good one. Want to promote a product
or service? Prigozhin's online marketeers can address the right crowds.
To
achieve those results the few temps who worked on such projects needed to
multiply their online personalities. It is better to have fifty people vouch
for you online than just five. No one cares if these are real people or just
virtual ones. The internet makes it easy to create such sock-puppets. The
virtual crowd can then be used to push personalities, products or political
opinions. Such schemes are nothing new or special. Every decent
"western" public relations and marketing company will offer a similar
service and has done so for years.
While
it is relatively easy to have sock-puppets swamp the comment threads of such
sites as this blog, it is more difficult to have a real effect on social
networks. These depend on multiplier effects. To gain many real
"likes", "re-tweets" or "followers" an online
persona needs a certain history and reputation. Real people need to feel
attached to it. It takes some time and effort to build such a multiplier
personality, be it real or virtual.
At
some point Prigozhin, or whoever by then owned the internet marketing company,
decided to expand into the lucrative English speaking market. This would
require to build many English language online persona and to give those some
history and time to gain crowds of followers and a credible reputation.
The
company sent a few of its staff to the U.S. to gain some impressions, pictures
and experience of the surroundings. They would later use these to impersonate
as U.S. locals. It was a medium size, long-term investment of maybe a
hundred-thousand bucks over two or three years.
The
U.S. election provided an excellent environment to build reputable online
persona with large followings of people with discriminable mindsets. The
political affinity was not important. The personalities only had to be very
engaged and stick to their issue - be it left or right or whatever. The sole
point was to gain as many followers as possible who could be segmented along
social-political lines and marketed to the companies customers.
Again
- there is nothing new to this. It is something hundreds, if not thousands of
companies are doing as their daily business. The Russian company hoped to enter
the business with a cost advantage. Even its mid-ranking managers were paid as
little as $1,200 per month. The students and other temporary workers who would
'work' the virtual personas as puppeteers would earn even less. Any U.S.
company in a similar business would have higher costs.
In
parallel to building virtual online persona the company also built some
click-bait websites and groups and promoted these through mini Facebook
advertisements. These were the "Russian influence ads" on Facebook
the U.S. media were so enraged about. They included the promotion of a Facebook
page about cute puppies. Back in October we described how those "Russian
influence" ads (most of which were shown after the election or were not
seen at all) were simply part of a commercial scheme:
The pages described
and the ads leading to them are typical click-bait, not part of a political
influence op.
...
One builds pages with "hot" stuff that hopefully attracts lots of viewers. One creates ad-space on these pages and fills it with Google ads. One attracts viewers and promotes the spiked pages by buying $3 Facebook mini-ads for them. The mini-ads are targeted at the most susceptible groups.
...
One builds pages with "hot" stuff that hopefully attracts lots of viewers. One creates ad-space on these pages and fills it with Google ads. One attracts viewers and promotes the spiked pages by buying $3 Facebook mini-ads for them. The mini-ads are targeted at the most susceptible groups.
A few
thousand users will come and look at such pages. Some will 'like' the puppy
pictures or the rant for or against LGBT and further spread them. Some will
click the Google ads. Money then flows into the pockets of the page creator.
One can rinse and repeat this scheme forever. Each such page is a small effort
for a small revenue. But the scheme is highly scaleable and parts of it can be
automatized.
Because
of the myriad of U.S. sanctions against Russia the monetization of these
business schemes required some creativity. One can easily find the name of a
real U.S. person together with the assigned social security number and its date
of birth. Those data are enough to open, for example, a Paypal account under a
U.S. name. A U.S. customer of the cloaked Russian Internet company could then
pay to the Paypal account and the money could be transferred from there to
Moscow. These accounts could also be used to buy advertisement on Facebook. The
person who's data was used to create the account would never learn of it and
would have no loss or other damage.
Another scheme is to simply pay some U.S.
person to open a U.S. bank account and to then hand over the 'keys' to that
account.
The
Justice Department indictment is quite long and detailed. It must have been
expensive. If you read it do so with the above in mind. Skip over the
assumptions and claims of political interference and digest only the facts. All
that is left is, as explained, a commercial marketing scheme.
I will
not go into all its detail of the indictment but here are some points that
support the above description.
Point
4:
Defendants, posing as
US. persons and creating false U.S. personas, operated social media pages and
groups designed to attract U.S. audiences.
These groups and pages, which
addressed divisive US. political and social issues, falsely
claimed to be controlled by US. activists when, in fact, they were controlled
by Defendants. Defendants also used the stolen identities of real U.S. persons
to post on social media accounts. Over time, these social media
accounts became Defendants' means to reach significant numbers of Americans ...
Point
10d:
By in or around April
2014, the ORGANIZATION formed a department that went by various names but was
at times referred to as the "translator project."
This project
focused on the US. population and conducted operations on social media
platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. By approximately
July 2016, more than eighty ORGANIZATION employees were assigned to the
translator project.
(Some
U.S. media today made the false claim that $1.25 million per month were spend
by the company for its U.S. campaign. But Point 11 of the indictment says that
the company ran a number of such projects with some directed at a Russian
audience while only the one described in 10d above is aimed at an U.S.
audience. All these projects together had a monthly budget of $1.25 million.)
(Point
17, 18 and 19 indict individual persons who have worked for the
"translator" project" "to at least in and around [some
month] 2014". It is completely unclear how these persons, who seem to have
left the company two years before the U.S. election, are supposed to have
anything to do with the claimed "Russian influence" on the U.S.
election.)
Point
32:
Defendants and their
co-conspirators, through fraud and deceit, created hundreds of social
media accounts and used them to develop certain fictitious U.S. personas into
"leader[s] of public opinion" in the United States.
The
indictment then goes on and on describing the "political activities"
of the sock-puppet personas. Some posted pro-Hillary slogans, some anti-Hillary
stuff, some were pro-Trump, some anti-all, some urged not to vote, others to
vote for third party candidates. Some of the persona called for going to
anti-Islam rallies while others promoted pro-Islam rallies. There was in fact
no overall political trend in all of this. The sock-puppets did not post fake
news.
They posted mainstream media stories. The sole point was
to create a large total following by having multiple personas which together
covered all potential strata.
At
Point 86 the indictment turns to Count Two - "Conspiracy to Commit Wire
Fraud and Bank Fraud". The puppeteers opened, as explained above, various
Paypal accounts using 'borrowed' data.
Then
comes the point which confirms the commercial marketing story as laid out
above:
Point
95:
Defendants and their
co-conspirators also used the accounts to receive money from real U.S.
persons in exchange for posting promotions and advertisements on the
ORGANIZATION-controlled social media pages. Defendants and their
co-conspirators typically charged certain U.S. merchants and U.S.
social media sites between 25 and 50 U.S. dollars per post for promotional
content on their popular false U.S. persona accounts, including Being
Patriotic, Defend the 2nd, and Blacktivist.
There
you have it. There was no political point to what the Russian company did.
Whatever political slogans one of the company's sock-puppets posted had only
one aim: to increase the number of followers for that sock-puppet. The
sole point of creating a diverse army of sock-puppets with large following
crowds was to sell the 'eyeballs' of the followers to the paying customers of
the marketing company.
There
were, according to the indictment, eighty people working on the
"translator project". These controlled "hundreds" of
sock-puppets online accounts each with a distinct "political"
personality. Each of these sock-puppets had a large number of followers - in
total several hundred-thousands. Now let's assume that one promotional post can
be sold per day on each of the sock-puppets content stream. The scheme
generates several thousand dollars per day ($25 per promo, hundreds of
sock-puppets, 1-5 promos per day per sock-puppet). The costs for this were
limited to the wages of up to eighty persons in Moscow, many of them temps, of
which the highest paid received some $1,000 per month. While the upfront
multiyear investment to create and establish the virtual personas was probably
significant, this was, over all, a highly profitable business.
Again
- this had nothing to do with political influence on the election. The sole
point of political posts was to create 'engagement' and a larger number of
followers in each potential social-political segment. People who buy
promotional posts want these to be targeted at a specific audience. The Russian
company could offer whatever audience was needed. It had sock-puppets with
pro-LGBT view and a large following and sock-puppets with anti-LGBT views and a
large following. It could provide pro-2nd amendment crowds as well as Jill
Stein followers. Each of the sock-puppets had over time generated a group of
followers that were like minded. The entity buying the promotion simply had to
choose which group it preferred to address.
The
panic of the U.S. establishment over the loss of their preferred candidate
created an artificial storm over "Russian influence" and assumed
"collusion" with the Trump campaign. (Certain Democrats though, like
Adam Schiff, profit from creating a new Cold War
through their sponsoring armament companies.)
The
Mueller investigation found no "collusion" between anything Russia
and the Trump campaign. The indictment does not mentions any. The whole
"Russian influence" storm is based on a misunderstanding of
commercial activities of a Russian marketing company in U.S. social networks.
There
is a danger in this. The indictment sets up a new theory of nefarious foreign
influence that could be applied to even this blog. As U.S. lawyer Robert Barns explains:
The only thing
frightening about this indictment is the dangerous and dumb precedent it could
set: foreign nationals criminally prohibited from public expression in the US
during elections unless registered as foreign agents and reporting their
expenditures to the FEC.
...
Mueller's new crime only requires 3 elements: 1) a foreign national; 2) outspoken on US social media during US election; and 3) failed to register as a foreign agent or failed to report receipts/expenditures of speech activity. Could indict millions under that theory.
...
...
Mueller's new crime only requires 3 elements: 1) a foreign national; 2) outspoken on US social media during US election; and 3) failed to register as a foreign agent or failed to report receipts/expenditures of speech activity. Could indict millions under that theory.
...
The legal theory of the indictment for most of the defendants and most of the charges alleges that the "fraud" was simply not registering as a foreign agent or not reporting expenses to the FEC because they were a foreign national expressing views in a US election.
Author
Leonid Bershidsky, who prominently writes for Bloomberg, remarks:
I'm actually
surprised I haven't been indicted. I'm Russian, I was in the U.S. in 2016 and I
published columns critical of both Clinton and Trump w/o registering as a
foreign agent.
As
most of you will know your author writing this is German. I write
pseudo-anonymously for a mostly U.S. audience. My postings are political and
during the U.S. election campaign expressed an anti-Hillary view. The blog is
hosted on U.S, infrastructure paid for by me. I am not registered as Foreign
Agent or with the Federal Election Commission.
Under
the theory on which the indictment is based I could also be indicted for a
similar "Conspiracy to Defraud the United States".
(Are
those of you who kindly donate for this blog co-conspiractors?)
When
Yevgeni Prigozhin, the hot dog caterer who allegedly owns the internet
promotion business, was asked about the indictment he responded:
"The Americans
are really impressionable people, they see what they want to see. [...] If they
want to see the devil, let them see him."
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