It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: ExVoto
My general issue with the Russian social media trolling:
1. TROLLING
I think foreign involvement sucks, and There can be tools created to meter this. The issue should be a priority to address. However, I doubt few people actually know the law on this. I sure don't. Was their Trolling bad JUST because it was about the election? Or could they have Trolled Star Wars freely?
2. NO REAL IMPACT
The actual reach of these posts might look big. Anyone who has been trained on facebook advertising, or buying social media ads can tell you that 'reach' is a huge term that is built on a lot of data points. If you don't understand this, then any number you hear can be misleading.
NYT / How Russia did it
"The indictment said that Facebook ads for the Florida rallies reached more than 59,000 users and were clicked on by more than 8,300."
There are low level talking heads like Mike Cernovich or Donna Brazile can get 50k views or 'reach' by simply posting. Who do they effect besides their respective choirs?
In order for their reach to convert into any effective result, using their conversion ratio from the paid results as a guide, they would have to have had multiples of organic traffic to the tune of 48 shares for every click to have even an outside chance of materially affecting anything.
That level of virality would have made news in ad circles instantly during the political cycles as every other political ad buyer would have jumped at trying to mimic those result.
That never happened, ergo the social media impact was underwhelming at best, and expensive at least.
4. BUYING ADS IS NO GUARANTEE OF ANY RETURN
Some companies have given up buying social media ads all together because they seem to be all 'bark and no bite"
I have been trained on the ad buying process of Facebook. It's not difficult at all. I have spent my own money as well as client money on targeted demographics a number of times. It's a continual crapshoot, even for the experts.
PROCTOR & GAMBLE TO STOP BUYING FACEBOOK ADS
4. DIDN'T CHANGE THE OUTCOME
I think the claim that these ad buys effected the election is a huge stretch. I believe that claim is irresponsible journalism. I've seen no evidence that this is true. I have seen plenty of evidence that these did little more than grab existing confirmation bias.
The only doofus I know of who fell for it was this guy:
originally posted by: LesMisanthrope
a reply to: ExVoto
I agree. The silly notion that this activity is considered “meddling”, or a threat to democracy, is false.
Sooooo basically the Russians did the same exact thing as HRC's "Correct the Record" team.
Inherent in the premise that foreign political speech is damaging and should be banned is the assumption that the domestic populous is too stupid or ignorant to know any better.
China not only has the Great Wall, but the Great Firewall.
originally posted by: loam
a reply to: ExVoto
Can't see the video, but I can imagine it adequately supports your point.
originally posted by: DBCowboy
a reply to: ExVoto
Something about this narrative deeply disturbs me.
So someone basically said something about an election. Does it really matter who?
I certainly said plenty about the 2016 election.
I tried to influence potential voters by writing about the candidates. I was biased. I was partisan against different candidates.
So the narrative is that Russia meddled, which they certainly did. Who's to say that my "meddling" didn't influence any voters?
Is this an attack on speech? An attack on opinion?
The US spends countless millions to influence other nations electoral processes.
It's called foreign policy when we do it.
originally posted by: ExVoto
“You've created these platforms & now they are being misused and you have to be the ones to do something about it or we will.”