Skip to content
Ozero Baikal

Ozero Baikal

  • Home
  • Russian attraction
  • Russian lake
  • Russian travel
  • Russian community
  • Russian economy
Watch Online
  • Home
  • Russian lake
  • Canada targets Russian disinformation, with tweets linked to foreign powers – Lake Country Calendar
  • Russian lake

Canada targets Russian disinformation, with tweets linked to foreign powers – Lake Country Calendar

Eusebio R. Sheffield June 9, 2022 3 min read

An analysis of more than six million tweets and retweets – and where they came from – revealed that Canada is being targeted by Russia to sway public opinion here.

The University of Calgary School of Public Policy study found that a large number of tweets and retweets about the war in Ukraine can be traced back to Russia and China, with even more tweets expressing pro sentiment. -Russian in the United States.

Assistant Professor Jean-Christophe Boucher said in an interview that the Russian “state apparatus” is associated with many accounts that tweet in Canada and influences which posts are retweeted, liked or repeated over and over again by different accounts.

The tweets usually express pro-Russian talking points, including that Ukraine is a fascist state or that NATO wants to expand, which poses a threat to Russia.

The University of Calgary team of experts analyzed 6.2 million tweets from around the world and applied algorithms to trace their origins.

He profiled accounts tweeting and retweeting remarks including key terms associated with the war in Ukraine. A location filter was applied to narrow it down to tweets associated with Canadian Twitter profiles.

The team then linked accounts and mapped online conversations about the war.

Algorithms identified clusters and top influencers in Canada and abroad promoting pro-Russian narratives.

He found that in the “Canadian Twitter ecosystem” discussing the war, about 25% of accounts were spreading pro-Russian talking points.

Boucher warned that some stories were “Trojan horses,” with some Canadians unaware that pro-Putin stories trace back to Russia, China or right-wing influencers in the United States.

Analysis of the content of the tweets revealed similar pro-Russian views expressed among right-wing figures and their supporters in the United States and Canada, he said.

He said supporters of the “Freedom Convoy” and the anti-vaccine movement, some of whom may not realize they digested messages from Russia, also tweeted messages in favor of the invasion of Ukraine.

Many tweets in pro-Russian conversations on social media also express distrust of institutions and “a specific distrust of the Liberal government of Canada, and in particular Prime Minister (Justin) Trudeau”, according to the report.

Boucher said “foreign interference in Canada’s information space” is now so widespread that it sows distrust in Canada’s democratic institutions, including the federal government and mainstream media.

“Social media has increasingly been able to shape people’s opinions. It weakens our democratic resilience,” he said. “It creates dissent and erodes trust in institutions.”

He said that although foreign bots are used to spread misinformation on social media, their role is often exaggerated.

Influencers with millions of followers – including in the US – had a wider reach on Twitter than bots and “retweet and amplify Russian narratives”.

The academic discovered that American influencers were tweeting pro-Russian remarks. Some of these messages were, in turn, retweeted by accounts associated with the Russian state.

Boucher said that since the study was completed, his team had collected an additional four million tweets about the war in Ukraine, bringing the total to 10 million tweets, and the number was growing.

Boucher said the “pathway of influence” of many pro-Russian tweets goes back to accounts “associated with Russia, including the Russian state apparatus.”

He said “Russian accounts retweet and amplify” pro-Russian tweets in the United States and elsewhere.

“We have the state apparatus in Russia and China promoting propaganda.”

—Marie Woolf, The Canadian Press

Internet and TelecomRussiaSocial MediaUkraine

Continue Reading

Previous: Canada targets Russian disinformation, with tweets linked to foreign powers
Next: Top Senate Democrats sound alarm over Russian interference in 2022 midterm elections

Related Stories

Ukrainian artist pokes fun at Russian invaders in Odessa style
5 min read
  • Russian lake

Ukrainian artist pokes fun at Russian invaders in Odessa style

June 21, 2022
Lithuania blocks transit of Russian goods to Kaliningrad | New
2 min read
  • Russian lake

Lithuania blocks transit of Russian goods to Kaliningrad | New

June 20, 2022
Yle: A Russian helicopter briefly violated Finnish airspace last month | New
1 min read
  • Russian lake

Yle: A Russian helicopter briefly violated Finnish airspace last month | New

June 18, 2022

Categories

  • Russian attraction
  • Russian community
  • Russian economy
  • Russian lake
  • Russian travel

eastern ukraine invasion ukraine joe biden president joe president vladimir prime minister russian forces russian invasion russian military russian president russian troops russia ukraine ukrainian border united states vladimir putin

Recent Posts

  • Fake Messaging App Installers are being promoted on shady download sites aimed at Russian users

  • Ukrainian artist pokes fun at Russian invaders in Odessa style

  • Russian journalist’s Nobel medal sells for $103.5 million

  • Russian Journalist Sells Nobel Prize For Over $100 Million To Help Ukraine

  • Ukrainians find a Russian priest ready to help them rebuild their shattered lives

  • Lithuania blocks transit of Russian goods to Kaliningrad | New

Archives

  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • August 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • November 2017
  • June 2017
  • January 2017
  • May 2016
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions