1. TWITTER FILES #17
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
New Knowledge, the Global Engagement Center, and State-Sponsored Blacklists pic.twitter.com/8LuoKY9zzA
2. On June 8, 2021, an analyst at the Atlantic Councilโs Digital Forensic Research Lab wrote to Twitter:
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
โHi guys. Attached you will findโฆ around 40k twitter accounts that our researchers suspect are engaging in inauthentic behaviorโฆ and Hindu nationalism more broadly.โ pic.twitter.com/0RpK3kyhHC
3. DFRLab said it suspected 40,000 accounts of being โpaid employees or possibly volunteersโ of Indiaโs Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
But the list was full of ordinary Americans, many with no connection to India and no clue about Indian politics. https://t.co/B5L8KsY6ZH pic.twitter.com/vqijzp9BR2
4. โI have no connection to any Hindu folks… Just a Reagan Republican here in CT,โ replied โBobby Hailstone.โ
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
โA Hindu nationalist? Iโve never even been out of this country. Let alone the state of NJ,โ said โLady_DI816.โ
โThese people are insane!โ said โKrista Woods.โ
5. Twitter agreed, one reason many of the accounts remain active. โThanks, Andy,โ replied Trust and Safety chief Yoel Roth. โI spot-checked a number of these accounts, and virtually all appear to be real people.โ pic.twitter.com/HCf1YPjpFa
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
7. DFRLab is funded by the U.S. Government, specifically the Global Engagement Center (GEC).
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Director Graham Brookie denies DFRLab it uses tax money to track Americans, saying its GEC grants have "an exclusively international focus.โ
8. But Americans on DFRโs list, like Marysel Urbanik, are unconvinced its focus is โexclusively international.โ
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
โThis is un-American,โ says Urbanik, who immigrated from Castroโs Cuba. โThey do this in places that donโt believe in free speech.โ pic.twitter.com/7MKySCe3XN
9. The Global Engagement Center is usually listed as a State Department entity.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
It's not.
Created in Obamaโs last year, GEC is an interagency group โwithinโ State, whose initial partners included FBI, DHS, NSA, CIA, DARPA, Special Operations Command (SOCOM), and others. pic.twitter.com/rdezEFYRwI
10. GECโs mandate: โTo recognize, understand, expose, and counter foreign… disinformation.โ
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
On the surface, itโs the same mission the United States Information Agency (USIA) fulfilled for decades, with a catch. USIA focused on foreign โdisinfo.โ
GECโs focus is wider. pic.twitter.com/upfxHqGjQ5
11. โItโs an incubator for the domestic disinformation complex,โ says a former intelligence source. โAll the shit we pulled in other countries since the Cold War, some morons decided to bring home.โ
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
12.GEC could have avoided controversy by focusing on exposing/answering โdisinformationโ with research and a more public approach, as USIA did. Instead, it funded a secret list of subcontractors and helped pioneer an insidious โ and idiotic โ new form of blacklisting.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
https://t.co/0emM8JQDzO GEC asks Twitter to review 499 accounts as โforeignโ disinformation, for reasons that include using Signal to communicate and tweeting the hashtag, #IraniansDebateWithBiden. https://t.co/Gz1ZAElqrI pic.twitter.com/31Di6SSI1D
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
14. Here are 5500 names GEC told Twitter it believed were โChineseโฆ accountsโ engaged in โstate-backed coordinated manipulation.โ It takes about negative ten seconds to find non-Chinese figures: https://t.co/pkttqOL34S pic.twitter.com/wjyuJrUFpN
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
15. GECโs โChineseโ list included multiple Western government accounts and at least three CNN employees based abroad. โNot exactly Andersonโs besties, but CNN assets if you will,โ quipped Twitterโs Patrick Conlon.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
"A total crock,โ added Trust and Safety chief Yoel Roth. pic.twitter.com/vvvrjOxBfO
16.GEC passed some good information to Twitter, but mostly not. The root problem was exemplified by a much-circulated 2020 report, โRussian Pillars of Disinformation and Propaganda.โ pic.twitter.com/2Ws8NUDb7z
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
17.This GEC report was contradictory. On one hand, it offered reasoned evidence that a specific outlet like the โStrategic Culture Foundationโ was partnered with the Russian Foreign Ministry, which would make it a true "proxy site." pic.twitter.com/7nFrJMjydW
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
18.The same report advanced a far lazier idea.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Along with state actors, groups that โgenerate their own momentumโ should also be seen as parts of a propaganda โecosystem."
Independence, GEC said, should not โconfuse those trying to discern the truth.โ pic.twitter.com/ikbOb9YQoj
19. The โecosystemโ is not a new concept. Itโs been with us since Salem: guilt by association.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
As one Twitter exec put it: โโIf you retweet a news source linked to Russia, you become Russia-linked,โ does not exactly resonate as a sound research approach.โ pic.twitter.com/H4RxQhgM3B
20.GEC sent Twitter a series of reports on a series of topics, often employing the โecosystemโ concept.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Its report on France โattributes membership in the yellow vest movement as being Russia-aligned,โ is how Twitterโs Aaron Rodericks put it. pic.twitter.com/iDBZbr7GWg
21.GECโs report on China was โmore entertainment value than anything,โ said Rodericks. โIt equates anything pro-China, but also anything against China in Italy, as part of Russia's strategy.โ pic.twitter.com/uH1nl7LMEU
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
22. Twitter staffers had professionalism. They tended to look at least once before declaring a thing foreign disinformation. This made them a tough crowd for GEC.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Fortunately, there's an easier mark: the news media.
23.GECโs game: create an alarmist report, send it to the slower animals in journalismโs herd, and wait as reporters bang on Twitterโs door, demanding to know why this or that โecosystemโ isnโt obliterated.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Twitter emails ooze frustration at such queries. UGGG! reads one. pic.twitter.com/Xkw7fOKZXL
25.Twitter disagreed with GECโs alert about Russian โdisinfoโ in South America, which appeared to confused cause and effect.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
As Rodericks put it, โI believe what they mean is: โthere was a surge in accounts that agreed with Moscow-aligned narratives' = Moscow controlled.โ pic.twitter.com/coMkbksWCO
26. Roth noted Bret Schafer of the Alliance for Securing Democracy was quoted in Frenkelโs story and said: โSeems like ASD are back at their old tricks.โ pic.twitter.com/krrJLw0Ats
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
27. Roth was referring to the fact that the ASD created Hamilton 68, another guilt-by-association scheme detailed in Twitter Files #15. The Hamilton โdashboardโ claimed to track accounts linked to โRussian influence activities,โ but the list was largely made up of Americans. pic.twitter.com/VEKokQsdHx
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
28. The Hamilton 68 dashboard creator, J.M. Berger, was on the GEC payroll until June of 2017, just before the dashboardโs launch. Hamilton claimed the list was โthe fruit of more than three years of observation.โ
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Berger โunequivocallyโ denies working on Hamilton for GEC. pic.twitter.com/1QJpV39tIH
30. The Hamilton 68 dashboard employed digital alchemy to create streams of headlines tying Americans to โforeignโ disinformation.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
The โecosystemโ reports GEC and many "disinformation" laboratories feed reporters are often just subtler versions of the same thing. pic.twitter.com/tfM2lh2PdJ
31. In a crucial in-house Q&A in mid-2017, Roth was asked if it was possible to detect โRussian fingerprintsโ using Twitterโs public data. Though โyou can make inferences,โ he said, โin short, no.โ pic.twitter.com/vax9ODl0kV
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
32. Twitter therefore knew from the first days of the โforeign interferenceโ mania that the media zone was flooded with bad actors playing up cyber-threats for political or financial reasons, GEC included.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
33. โGEC has doubled their budget by aggressively overstating threats through unverified accusations that can't be replicated either by external academics or by Twitter,โ wrote Rodericks. pic.twitter.com/p7YSxoVq7T
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
34.The same is true of New Knowledge, the scandal-plagued company staffed by former NSA officials that the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) hired to do โexpertโ assessments of the initial batches of โsuspectโ Facebook and Twitter accounts. pic.twitter.com/BkWR5uLiJg
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
35. When Twitter saw New Knowledge and its reporter-worshipped โdisinformationโ gurus like Jonathon Morgan and Renee DiResta were making analytical leaps they felt were impossible, they knew something was off.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
36. After Politico cited a New Knowledge report to the SSCI as evidence for what it called a โsweeping effort to sow divisions,โ Twitter dug in. NK pointed to five supposedly Russian accounts it said were โrelatively easy to find with the Twitter public API."
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Roth scoffed. pic.twitter.com/GZ6lVfOF0k
37. Roth said two of the five accounts were a โsmall Indonesian content farmโฆ just commercial spam. (Would suspend but donโt want to throw fire on the NK report by making anyone think theyโre correct.) Becca account is an American and not at all suspicious.โ pic.twitter.com/BMzfIzjtsR
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
38.Twitterโs Nick Pickles: โNew Knowledgeโs pitch… pick accounts that they have deemed to be IRA controlled, and then spin up bigger macro analysis… stories about โ2000 Russian accounts tweeting about Kavanagh/Walkway/Caravanโ [were] often based on media activity from NK.โ pic.twitter.com/HbqMULcT16
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
39. Just like Hamilton 68, GEC and New Knowledge littered the media landscape with flawed or flat-out wrong news stories. Exacerbating matters, Americans in both cases paid taxes to become the subject of these manipulative operations. pic.twitter.com/9NxqGd22yu
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
40. Particularly egregious: a New Knowledge report to the Senate on Russian interference was leaked just days before it was outed in a scheme to fake Russian influence in an Alabama election, and no media outlets issued retractions.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
No SSCI staff have commented, either. pic.twitter.com/xnUG6f8pdo
41. Foreign cyber-threats exist, and there are sophisticated ways of detecting them. But GEC and its subcontractors donโt use those, instead deploying junk science that often lumps true bad actors in with organic opinion.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
42.โDisinformation studiesโ has mostly become a con, where non-experts mesmerize reporters with what one former GEC staffer calls โhairballโ charts, usually measuring something idiotic โ like who follows two Chinese diplomats, or shares an Iranian โFREE PALESTINEโ meme. pic.twitter.com/YDS3HOSFoy
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
43.The Washington Examiner and @gekaminsky just profiled a GEC-funded NGO in the UK that algorithmically scores media outlets by "risk."
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
How does downranking the Daily Wire to help the New York Times get more ad revenue counter โforeignโ disinformation? pic.twitter.com/KvCL5sM2HJ
https://t.co/nHnOyqlWrV IG report shows GEC was initially obligated $98.7 million, of which roughly $80 million came from the Pentagon. It reportedly gave to at least 39 different organizations, whose names were redacted.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Why is this list secret? pic.twitter.com/W8yUes75Ly
45. Twitter comms official Ian Plunkett wrote years ago that โmisinformation, like [countering violent extremism, or CVE] before it, is becoming a cottage industry.โ
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Disinformation is the counterterrorism mission, rebranded for domestic targets. pic.twitter.com/TElJC7Yrrl
46. Reauthorization for GECโs funding is up for a vote this year. Can we at least stop paying to blacklist ourselves?
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
47. The #TwitterFiles were prepared by a third party, so material may have been left out. Thanks to @ShellenbergerMD and the team at https://t.co/FCrKr0tMPX, whoโll have more on this all month.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
48. NOTE: Just before publication, Graham Brookie of DFRLab wrote to clarify about the 40,000 India names: โWe didnโt publish this from a former researcher because we lacked confidence in its findings.โ pic.twitter.com/SUdsKoQRzb
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
49. I asked Brookie if heโd made this lack of confidence clear to the Reuters reporter whose story based on that research is still live and uncorrected online: https://t.co/jCfrSiGA6X
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
He hasnโt replied. pic.twitter.com/GE655CbDHz
50. For more on these and other #TwitterFiles topics, @ShellenbergerMD and I will be testifying in the House on Thursday, March 9, at 10 a.m. We're humbled and grateful to @Jim_Jordan and @JudiciaryGOP for the invitation.
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023
Again, apologies: here is the โIndia Listโ https://t.co/848us04x0Y
— Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) March 2, 2023