US Twitter Files: GEC, New Knowledge, and State-Sponsored Blacklists - Americans have been paying taxes to disenfranchise themselves, as government agencies and subcontractors undertake a massive digital blacklisting project

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A new #TwitterFiles thread will be dropping in a few hours, at noon EST. It follows up the Hamilton 68 story of a month ago with examples of state-funded digital blacklisting campaigns run amok. It’s self-explanatory, but some advance context might help:

In 2015-2016, during the brief, forgotten period when Islamic terrorism was fading as a national obsession and Trumpian “domestic extremism” had not yet become one, Barack Obama made a series of decisions that may yet prove devastating to his legacy.

The short version is he signed Executive Order 13271, establishing a “Global Engagement Center” (“GEC”) to “counter the messaging and diminish the influence of international terrorist organizations.” This act got almost no press and even within government, almost no one noticed.

In the bigger picture, however, a lame duck president kick-started the process of shifting the national security establishment’s focus from counterterrorism to “disinformation.” Whether by malfunction or design, this abrupt course change of Washington’s contracting supertanker would have dramatic consequences. In fact, the tale of how America’s information warfare mechanism turned inward, against “threats” in our own population, might someday be remembered as the story of our time, with collective panic over “disinfo” defining this generation in much the same way the Red Scare defined the culture of the fifties.

This is a complicated story and it would be a mistake to jump to simplistic conclusions, like that the Global Engagement Center (humorously nicknamed “GECK” or “YUCK” by detractors in other agencies) is an evil Orwellian mind-control scheme. It isn’t. But for a few crucial bad decisions, it could have fulfilled a useful or at least logical mission, much as the United States Information Agency (USIA) once did. However, instead of stressing research and public reports, as the USIA did when responding to Soviet accusations that Americans had caused the AIDS crisis, GEC funded a secret list of contractors and employed a more surreptitious approach to “counter-disinformation,” sending companies like Twitter voluminous reports on foreign “ecosystems” — in practice, blacklists.

GEC was not conceived as a partisan mechanism to defang conservative media, despite the recent true and damning series of reports by the Washington Examiner, outlining how a GEC-funded NGO in England used algorithmic scoring to de-rank outlets like The Daily Wire and help papers like the New York Times earn more ad revenue. The blacklisting tales you’ll be reading about later today on Twitter also primarily target American conservatives, though GEC and GEC-funded contractors also target left-friendly movements like the gilets jaunes (yellow vests), socialist media outlets like Canada’s Global Research, even the Free Palestine movement.

The scary angle on GEC is not so much the agency as the sprawling infrastructure of “disinformation labs” that have grown around it.

Underneath America’s love affair with “anti-disinformation” in the Trump years — which expressed itself in the seemingly instant construction of a sprawling complex of disinformation studies “labs” at institutions like Harvard, Stanford, Clemson, UT, Pitt, William and Mary, the University of Washington, and other locations — lay a devastating secret. Most of these “experts” know nothing. Many have skill, if you can call mesmerizing dumb reporters a skill, but in the area of identifying true bad actors, few know more than the average person on the street.

This is described repeatedly in the #TwitterFiles. In one sequence Twitter was contacted by Sheera Frenkel of the New York Times, who was writing a hagiographic profiles of “disinformation” warrior Renee DiResta, who’d achieved some renown as a campaigner against vaccine misinformation. Frenkel wrote Twitter to ask why they hadn’t hired “independent researchers” like DiResta, Jonathan Albright, and Jonathon Morgan — coincidentally, all hired witnesses of the Senate Intelligence Committee — to help Twitter “better understand” its own business.

At the sight of Frenkel’s provocative note, some Twitter execs lost it.

“The word ‘researcher’ has taken on a very broad meaning,” snapped Nick Pickles. “Renee is literally doing this as a hobby… Of those three only [Albright] is the most credible, but... the bulk of his work is Medium blogs.”

“Like CVE before it, misinformation is becoming a cottage industry,” agreed comms official Ian Plunkett, referencing “countering violent extremism,” a.k.a. counterterrorism.

Today’s thread among other things will detail crude digital blacklisting schemes dreamed up by this new cottage industry. Each features the same design “flaw,” in which giant lists of supposed foreign disinformationists somehow also come to include ordinary Americans, often with the same political leanings.

In one ridiculous case, the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab), a GEC-funded entity, sent Twitter a huge list of people they suspected of “engaging in inauthentic behavior… and Hindu nationalism more broadly.” You’ll see the list to judge. As was the case with the “Hamilton 68” story, in which a spook-laden think tank purported to track accounts linked to “Russian influence activities” while really following the likes of @TrumpDyke and @TimeForTrumppp, this DFRLab list of “Hindu nationalists” is weirdly packed with real septuagenarian Trump supporters.

One, a woman named Marysel Urbanik who immigrated from Castro’s Cuba in her youth, struggled to understand why a Washington think tank had sent Twitter a letter ID’ing her as either “inauthentic” or a Hindu nationalist.

“They say I’m what?”

“A Hindu nationalist,” I said. “Well, suspected.”

“But I’m Cuban, not Indian,” she pleaded, confused. “Hindu? I wouldn’t even know what words to say.”

Such listmakers are either employing extremely expansive definitions of hate speech, extremely inexact methods of identifying spam, or they’re doing both in addition to a third thing: keeping up a busywork campaign for underemployed ex-anti-terror warriors, who don’t mind racking up lists of “foreign” disinformationists that just happen to also rope in domestic undesirables.

In his book Information Wars, the original nominal head of GEC and former Time editor Rick Stengel explained an epiphany he had that allowed him to tie the fight against “foreign” disinformation to matters domestic. It happened when Stengel watched a YouTube video of Russian nationalist Alexander Dugin:

He castigated Hillary Clinton’s campaign as a bunch of '“storm troopers.” He lambasted what he called the American “obsession with the fake Russian threat.” He said it was an excuse for losers… The production values were poor, the audience was small, but the video revealed an extraordinary mirroring of language and ideas between Dugin and other Russian voices and candidate Trump… The notion that there was some kind of shared rhetorical playbook just seemed too fanciful to believe. While the messages did not exactly repeat each other, they certainly rhymed.

At the same time as Dugin was uploading his video, according to public U.S. intelligence, the GRU—the Russian military intelligence service—began going through the email accounts of DNC officials…

Stengel didn’t need to prove an actual link between Dugin, Russia, and Trump. It was enough to imply it, by placing stories about the GRU near Trump’s name, while asserting Trump and Dugin’s ideas “rhymed.”

This is probably what’s going on in the DFRLab list: one assumes many BJP supporters have views that “rhyme” with what one might call the American version of nationalism, #MAGA. Similarly, a GEC report sent to Twitter about “Russian Pillars of Disinformation” stressed that even actors who “generate their own momentum” online should be considered part of a propaganda “ecosystem.” Independence, the GEC report stressed, should not “confuse those trying to discern the truth.”

Twitter’s complaints against agencies like GEC and projects like the India list dovetail with what current and former intelligence sources have been calling in to comment on, since the first Twitter Files reports: that though sophisticated methods for detecting true bad actors exist, virtually none of the high-profile “experts” employ those.

Instead, methodologies are often openly absurd. List #1 might target everyone who follows more than one Chinese diplomat on Twitter. List #2 might rope in everyone who’s retweeted a “Peter Douche” video or a “Free Palestine” meme made in Iran. One former GEC staffer laughs about how experts win over the media with impressive-looking “hairball” charts that nearly always come down to some sort of volume or affinity analysis: who retweets whom, whose ideas “rhyme” with whose, etc.

In a key email, Twitter Trust and Safety chief Yoel Roth is asked in an internal Q&A if outside researchers can really detect “Russian fingerprints” just by looking at Twitter’s public data.

“In short, no,” he said, adding that it was really only possible to make “inferences.”

But inferences are enough, for the innumerable “Centers for Countering Whatever” whose real goals may involve deplatforming or disenfranchising domestic groups deemed unworthy of sharing the full benefits of Western civil society (like the unmolested use of PayPal, GoFundMe, Twitter, etc.). With an inference, you can smear, and with a smear, you can do damage.

The Hamilton 68 scam in this sense was perfect. It used digital alchemy to create streams of news stories tying ordinary Americans to “foreign” disinformation. With headlines like CNN’s “Russian bots are using #WalkAway to try to wound Dems in midterms” in hand, a “Disinfo Lab” or a noble journalistic enterprise like the “extremism” desk at USA Today can finish the important work of calling up strings of Internet companies to “ask” why this or that person is still allowed to use credit cards, advertise on Amazon, etc.

What organizations like GEC and subcontractors like DFRLab do are just subtler versions of those same schemes. They make lists and let the increasingly sophisticated machinery of digital deprivation do the rest. It’s bad enough when this dubious activity is private. But paying taxes for the pleasure? This supertanker needs turning around.
 
Here's the Twitter thread being referenced.

I don't know if any of you guys have been keeping tabs on this Twitter Files story, but it's fucking wild. it's the modern iteration of Operation Mockingbird. it's the concrete example to back up that meme about people thinking the intelligence agencies did a bunch of crazy shit in the 60s and then just happened to completely stop one day. but more than that, it's a pretty detailed look into how the federal government's modern information control systems work. IMO it's an essential read for any tinfoil hat type, as it pretty clearly exposes some of the tactics the glowies use these days.

some background: when Elon bought Twitter, he also inherited their entire cache of internal documentation, e-mail history, slack logs, all that shit. at some point during the usual bookkeeping of going through the old shit and figuring out what to keep, he found a whole bunch of records of the Twitter heads receiving instructions directly from the federal government on which accounts to censor on the presumption that they were "Russian bots" or some other stripe of malicious actor. and Twitter wasn't the only one. a lot of these e-mails also had the heads of other social media companies like Facebook in them, indicating this is an effort that spans most or all mainstream social media platforms. the methodology being used to determine whether the given accounts are actual bots, or bad actors, or Putinite propagandists or whatever, repeatedly comes under questioning in these documents, with Twitter being unable to independently corroborate the feds' assertions, but they decided to go along with it anyway. by the way, the feds also had significant access to Twitter's supposedly private data analytics. that wasn't in the privacy policy!

anyway, upon discovering this shit, Elon for some reason picked Taibbi and a handful of other indie journalists to contact about this and send them a huge heap of unsorted documents. ever since then, Taibbi et. al. have been searching, sorting, collating, and trying to make a big picture out of all this shit. the result has been a slow drip-feed of stories describing - in stark detail - what was in effect a federal campaign to censor pro-Trump conservatives on the internet. we all knew this was happening; here's the receipts. I'll let you guess how much of this has been covered by mainstream outlets.

one thing that strikes me about it is that the work of actually designating targets has essentially been left to failkids. the people at the actual core of this project are total retards with no credentials or authority, or even really a concrete idea of what they're supposed to be doing beyond Orange Man Bad. they're totally reliant on the higher levels of the pipeline, the actual desk commanders, to get their dumb bullshit shipped and shoved down the throats of their targeted platforms. given that even the Twitter execs balk at how obviously false and stupid the information they're being given is, one really has to wonder why the upper echelon lizardmen are standing behind it. it's so, so sus.

if you want to read more, here's a launch page with links to all of Taibbi's stories on the subject so far.
 
one thing that strikes me about it is that the work of actually designating targets has essentially been left to failkids. the people at the actual core of this project are total retards with no credentials or authority, or even really a concrete idea of what they're supposed to be doing beyond Orange Man Bad. they're totally reliant on the higher levels of the pipeline, the actual desk commanders, to get their dumb bullshit shipped and shoved down the throats of their targeted platforms. given that even the Twitter execs balk at how obviously false and stupid the information they're being given is, one really has to wonder why the upper echelon lizardmen are standing behind it. it's so, so sus.
The way you put it makes it sound like the people actually carrying out the orders are meant to be patsies and fall guys for the reluctant people at the top who know the full extent of everything.
 
The way you put it makes it sound like the people actually carrying out the orders are meant to be patsies and fall guys for the reluctant people at the top who know the full extent of everything.
I think this is an iteration of that "chaos as a strategy" tactic the alphabets learned during WW2. No one can figure out patterns if there's no patterns.
 
Who knew those 90s music videos and video games would be so prophetic? Right down to our elites being total weirdos.


I think this is an iteration of that "chaos as a strategy" tactic the alphabets learned during WW2. No one can figure out patterns if there's no patterns.
There is one consistent pattern though. Never trust the government.
 
So you didn't notice how social media sites, search engines, and online digital wallets AREN'T the government?
The last one is debateable. The first two however is controlled to a point especially when other countries have their own equivalents usually and have limited access to clearnet. The Cathedral (US Gov+Biz+Big Tech) is sadly, real.
 
wow im so fucking mad right now. Someone has to do something about this. As soon as I've finished building this castle in Minecraft the Feds are done for. Maybe I'll start an iron golem farm afterwards too who knows but definitely after that I'll get right to uh. destroying the government or whatever I said I'd do idk
 
I think this is an iteration of that "chaos as a strategy" tactic the alphabets learned during WW2. No one can figure out patterns if there's no patterns.
Except the obvious pattern was noticed by everybody who wasn't a partisan retard - that people who are right-wing and people who might be left-wing but not progressive were being censored and minimized.

Glowies are retarded as usual. Which is why they rely on fellow cowardly retards in the civilian world to throw snarlwords at anybody who points out the obvious patterns they don't want noticed. Also why they depend on the thinnest possible fucking veneer of "well ackshually you don't have any real evidence this is happening you conspiracy theorist :smug: "
So you didn't notice how social media sites, search engines, and online digital wallets AREN'T the government?
They aren't the government in the same way FOX, CNN, MSNBC, et al "aren't the government".

They are to the government what Kermit the Frog is to the guy's hand in his ass.
 
So you didn't notice how social media sites, search engines, and online digital wallets AREN'T the government?
Under the state actor doctrine, yes they are if they're acting under government orders (and no, there's no legal distinction between "requests"/"advice" and orders.)
 
The way you put it makes it sound like the people actually carrying out the orders are meant to be patsies and fall guys for the reluctant people at the top who know the full extent of everything.
I think this is an iteration of that "chaos as a strategy" tactic the alphabets learned during WW2. No one can figure out patterns if there's no patterns.

I don't think it's really that deliberate. I think it works more like this:

pretty much everybody internally justifies their actions after the fact, and elites are no exception. this is how you get shit like federal lizardmen funding foreign death squads to massacre random villagers and describing their policy later as a "fabulous achievement", bristling under the insinuation that they did anything wrong. so even if a visible member of the elite class has done something obviously horrifying, there's about a zero percent chance they'll ever own it and feel remorse. in fact I'd say the elites are especially vulnerable to this kind of mindset because 1) the gaining of power and influence is massively self-affirming - most people in that situation will take their success as evidence that they're correct, and conversely, admitting fault attacks the source of that power and wealth; 2) admitting misuse of power essentially strikes at the whole collective elite power structure. admitting you're wrong to the peasants means that peasants can trump the wisdom of the overclass, which can never be allowed. to maintain power, you must project power, and the deserving of it.

this gives the elites a fear of demagogues, because demagogues can rally sentiment against them by harnessing the peasants' doubts and dissatisfactions to attack this illusion directly. whether their points have merit or not is irrelevant, as any elite accused of being morally compromised will take immediate umbrage. therefore, elites have a vested interest in labeling this "misinformation", probably because many of them personally believe it is, but at the very least, because they can't allow criticism of them to be true. now, in the old days, putting a lid on that shit was pretty easy. the government became massively involved in the news media as it was becoming more centralized around the WWII era, and from then on through the rest of the 20th century, you could control what passed people's eyes by keeping tabs on just a relative handful of media organizations. but now - and remember the overwhelming majority of those actually in power are geriatric boomers - people have largely separated from that main information vein. there are upstart publications and citizen journalists everywhere, and most people of the younger generation get their takes from a streamer, a YouTube channel, a Twitter account, etc.

so, how do you police these new fangled innernets? the old method was pretty effective, so that seems like a good place to start. now how do we adapt the old method to the new media? well, the old method largely consisted of these components:
1) some kind of overarching narrative that establishes a reason why people can be arbitrarily identified as enemies (i.e., the communists have agents everywhere, undermining democracy! they could be anyone... you'd never know. maybe even a member of your family...)
2) a central processing structure that can identify and purge undesirable information (The La-Li-Lu-Le-Lo?!) and identify its sources in the process so that the former strategy can be applied
3) a method of leverage to ensure you control enough of the information flow to make your message the dominant one

item (1) is a rehash: the communists Russians have agents everywhere, undermining democracy! they could be anyone... you'd never know. maybe even a member of your Discord server...
item (3) is another rehash: financial control. the fed has a shitload of money to use at its discretion. when Elon took over, he claimed Twitter was losing $4 million dollars a day. have you ever wondered how Twitter actually makes money? have you ever heard of Twitter having financial problems or having to downscale personnel before this? it seems all the previous leadership did for the last several years was hire a massive number of content moderators. weird.

you'll notice I skipped item (2). this item is what this article is about specifically: the central processing structure. if you're a ballsack-looking boomer who barely manages to use their e-mail every day, how the hell are you going to navigate the insane incomprehensible tangle of internet culture? politics and the media are a world of strivers - people on the bottom echelons are constantly trying to do anything they can to get a foot in the door. that means doing any job, figuring out how to win their superiors over. in the media, and in the Clinton campaign, this meant there were already teams of people whose job was to make Orange Man Bad stories sound objective. the Russian disinfo thing I believe emerged from Hillary's camp to begin with. not to mention the possible influence of Dunning-Kruger - in a room full of idiots, the dumbest one is usually the most confident. these are the people who stepped forth to do the job of processing information and designating targets. grifters, idealogues, egotists. columnists, interns, nephews extraordinaire.

this, then, is the final result. a bunch of agency lizardmen defending themselves and their like from what they feel is unjustified criticism, but having no idea how to do it, and therefore enlisting the help of the only people who are dumb and/or crazy enough to claim to have the solution to this impossible task - grifters and retards. QED.
 
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@Hugger Brother

I like your post but it's worth mentioning as an addendum: these retards, the HNIC if you will of the U.S. gov that plot this shit, seemingly aren't aware or cannot grasp that places like this exist.

To a Nancy Pelosi, Mitch McConnell, etc type of establishment shithead and to some extent even "younger" pieces of the machine, places like this aren't really factored into their information control game as they see YT, Twitter, Facebook et al as the "real internet". Or at least, that's my theory as to why the retards seem so continually baffled as to how and why their control over narratives is nowhere near as tight as they seem to think.

Sure, glowies might "get it" but good fucking luck telling anything to such a person that might fuck with their plans aka something they don't want to hear.
 
It's all interesting, but if you ever try and engage with people on this. They've already gotten their instructions. "The Twitter files are cherry-picked, misleading and the journalists reporting on it are all dubious." Where any example point to, apparently doesn't actually say what is being claimed.
 
Under the state actor doctrine, yes they are if they're acting under government orders (and no, there's no legal distinction between "requests"/"advice" and orders.)
What do you mean requests or advice or orders? It's only a coincidence most of the board are feds, It's not like there was ANY INTENT for this to happen goy. Have fun proving this hypothetical intention anyways. Besides if it did happen it's a good thing, and who's going to change legislation to help YOU, a racist? lmao.
 
It's all interesting, but if you ever try and engage with people on this. They've already gotten their instructions. "The Twitter files are cherry-picked, misleading and the journalists reporting on it are all dubious." Where any example point to, apparently doesn't actually say what is being claimed.

sounds like a regular internet argument to me
 
like your post but it's worth mentioning as an addendum: these retards, the HNIC if you will of the U.S. gov that plot this shit, seemingly aren't aware or cannot grasp that places like this exist.
This is the silliest shit I've read all night. For the last 30 years the federal government has managed to infiltrate and destroy nearly any organization or sufficently capable group of people not directly aligned with those in power. You need only look at state militias, or Occupy Wallstreet to see this pattern. The events of the last year have shown that Null ,with the backing of his community, is capable, and a possible adversary to programs like the ones in the article. I have no doubt that the government is compiling a list of his associates and will go after them along with him, when proper legislation is passed to charge them.
 
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