
An illustration depicting all the leading institutions involved in the US Empire's censorship industrial complex. Photo: mrmooremedia.com.
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From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas
An illustration depicting all the leading institutions involved in the US Empire's censorship industrial complex. Photo: mrmooremedia.com.
By Tyler Durdenย –ย May 11, 2023
Introduction by Matt Taibbi
On January 17, 1960, outgoing President and former Supreme Allied Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower gave one of theย most consequential speeches in American history. Eisenhower for eight years had been a popular president, whose appeal drew upon a reputation as a person of great personal fortitude, whoโd guided the United States to victory in an existential fight for survival in World War II. Nonetheless, as he prepared to vacate the Oval Office for handsome young John F. Kennedy, he warned the country it was now at the mercy of a power eve he could not overcome.
Until World War II, America had no permanent arms manufacturing industry. Now it did, and this new sector, Eisenhower said, was building up around itself a cultural, financial, and political support system accruing enormous power. This โconjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience,โ he said, adding:
In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processesโฆ Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.
This was the direst of warnings, but the address has tended in the popular press to be ignored. After sixty-plus years, most of America โ including most of the American left, which traditionally focused the most on this issue โ has lost its fear that our arms industry might conquer democracy from within.
Now, however, weโve unfortunately found cause to reconsider Eisenhowerโs warning.
While the civilian population only in recent years began haggling over โde-platformingโ incidents involving figures like Alex Jones and Milo Yiannopoulos, government agencies had already long been advancing a new theory of international conflict, in which the informational landscape is more importantly understood as a battlefield than a forum for exchanging ideas. In this view, โspammyโ ads, โjunkโ news, and the sharing of work from โdisinformation agentsโ like Jones arenโt inevitable features of a free Internet, but sorties in a new form of conflict called โhybrid warfare.โ
In 1996, just the Internet was becoming part of daily life in America, the U.S. Army published โField Manual 100-6,โ which spoke of โan expanding information domain termed the Global Information Environmentโ that contains โinformation processes and systems that are beyond the direct influence of the military.โ Military commanders needed to understand that โinformation dominanceโ in the โGIEโ would henceforth be a crucial element for โoperating effectively.โ
Youโll often see it implied that โinformation operationsโ are only practiced by Americaโs enemies, because only Americaโs enemies are low enough, and deprived enough of real firepower, to require the use of such tactics, needing as they do to โovercome military limitations.โ We rarely hear about Americaโs own lengthy history with โactive measuresโ and โinformation operations,โ but popular media gives us space to read about the desperate tactics of the Asiatic enemy, perennially described as something like an incurable trans-continental golf cheat.
Indeed, part of the new mania surrounding โhybrid warfareโ is the idea that while the American human being is accustomed to living in clear states of โwarโ or โpeace,โ the Russian, Chinese, or Iranian citizen is born into a state of constant conflict, where war is always ongoing, whether declared or not. In the face of such adversaries, Americaโs โopenโ information landscape is little more than military weakness.
In March of 2017, in a hearing of the House Armed Services Committee on hybrid war, chairman Mac Thornberry opened the session with ominousย remarks, suggesting that in the wider context of history, an America built on constitutional principles of decentralized power might have been badly designed:
Americans areย used to thinking of a binary state of either war or peace. That is the way our organizations, doctrine, and approaches are geared. Other countries, including Russia, China, and Iran, use a wider array of centrally controlled, or at least centrally directed, instruments of national power and influence to achieve their objectivesโฆ
Whether it is contributing to foreign political parties, targeted assassinations of opponents, infiltrating non-uniformed personnel such as the little green men, traditional mediaย and social media, influence operations, or cyber-connected activity, all of these tactics and more are used to advance their national interests and most often to damage American national interestsโฆ
The historical records suggest that hybrid warfare in one form or another may well be the norm for human conflict, rather than the exception.
Around that same time, i.e. shortly after the election of Donald Trump, it was becoming gospel among the future leaders of the โCensorship-Industrial Complexโ that interference by โmalign foreign threat actorsโ and the vicissitudes of Western domestic politics must be linked.ย Everything, from John Podestaโs emails to Trumpโs Rust Belt primary victories to Brexit, were to be understood first and foremost as hybrid war events.
This is why the Trump-Russia scandal in the United States will likely be remembered as a crucial moment in 21st-century history, even though the investigation superficially ended a non-story, fake news in itself. What the Mueller investigation didnโt accomplish in ousting Trump from office, it did accomplish in birthing a vast new public-private bureaucracy devoted to stopping โmis-, dis-, and malinformation,โ while smoothing public acquiescence to the emergence of a spate of new government agencies with โinformation warfareโ missions.
The โCensorship-Industrial Complexโ is just the Military-Industrial Complex reborn for the โhybrid warfareโ age.
Much like the war industry, pleased to call itself the โdefenseโ sector, the โanti-disinformationโ complex markets itself as merely defensive, designed to fend off the hostile attacks of foreign cyber-adversaries who unlike us have โmilitary limitations.โ The CIC, however, is neither wholly about defense, nor even mostly focused on foreign โdisinformation.โ Itโs become instead a relentless, unified messaging system aimed primarily at domestic populations, who are told that political discord at home aids the enemyโs undeclared hybridย assault on democracy.
They suggest we must rethink old conceptions about rights, and give ourselves over to new surveillance techniques like โtoxicity monitoring,โ replace the musty old free press with editors claiming a โnose for newsโ with an updated model that uses automated assignment tools like โnewsworthy claim extraction,โ and submit to frank thought-policing mechanisms like the โredirect method,โ which sends ads at online browsers of dangerous content, pushing them toward โconstructive alternative messages.โ
Binding all this is a commitment to a new homogeneous politics, which the complex of public and private agencies listed below seeks to capture in something like a Unified Field Theory of neoliberal narrative, which can be perpetually tweaked and amplified online via algorithm and machine learning. This is what some of the organizations on this list mean when they talk about coming up with a โshared vocabularyโ of information disorder, or โcredibility,โ or โmedia literacy.โ
Anti-disinformation groups talk endlessly about building โresilienceโ to disinformation (which in practice means making sure the public hears approved narratives so often that anything else seems frightening or repellent), and audiences are trained to question not only the need for checks and balances, but competition. Competition is increasingly frowned upon not just in the โmarketplace of ideasโ (an idea itself more and more oftenย described as outdated), but in the traditional capitalist sense. In the Twitter Files we repeatedly find documents like this unsigned โSphere of Influenceโ review circulated by the Carnegie Endowment that wonders aloud if tech companies really need to be competing to โget it right:โ
In place of competition, the groups weโve been tracking favor the concept of the โshared endeavorโ (one British group has even started a โShared Endeavourโ program), in which key โstakeholdersโ hash out their disagreements in private, but present a unified front.
Who are the leaders of these messaging campaigns? If you care to ask, the groups below are a good place to start.
โThe Top 50 Listโ is intended as a resource for reporters and researchers beginning their journey toward learning the scale and ambition of the โCensorship-Industrial Complex.โ Written like a magazine feature, it tries to answer a few basic questions about funding, organization type, history, and especially, methodology. Many anti-disinformation groups adhere to the same formulaic approach to research, often using the same โhate-mapping,โ guilt-by-association-type analysis to identify wrong-thinkers and suppressive persons. There is even a tendency to use what one Twitter Files source described as the same โhairballโ graphs.
Where they compete, often, is in the area of gibberish verbiage describing their respective analytical methods. My favorite came from the Public Good Projects, which in a display of predictive skills reminiscent of the โunsinkable Titanicโ described itself as the โBuzzfeedย of public health.โ
Together, these groups are fast achieving what Eisenhower feared: the elimination of โbalanceโ between the democratic need for liberalizing laws and institutions, and the vigilance required for military preparation. Democratic society requires the nourishment of free debate, disagreement, and intellectual tension, but the groups below seek instead that โshared vocabularyโ to deploy on the hybrid battlefield. They propose to serve as the guardians of that โvocabulary,โ which sounds very like the scenario Ike outlined in 1961, in which โpublic policy could itself become the captive of a scientific and technological elite.โ
Without further ado, an introduction to the main players in this โCICโ:
โ1.โย Information Futures Lab (IFL) at Brown University (formerly, First Draft):
Link:ย https://sites.brown.edu/informationfutures/ย /ย https://First Draftnews.org/
Type: A university institute, housed within the School of Public Health, to combat โmisinformationโ and โoutdated communications practices.โ The successor toย First Draft, one of the earliest and more prominent โanti-disinformationโ outfits.
You may have read about them when: You first heard the termsย Mis-, dis-, and malinformation. The term was coined by FD Director Claire Wardle. IFL/FD are also the only academic/non-profit organization involved in theย Trusted News Initiative, a large-scale legacy media consortium established to control debate around the pandemic response. Wardle was Twitter executivesโ first pick for a signal group of anti-misinformation advisors it put together. She also participated in the Aspen Instituteโs Hunter Biden laptop tabletop in August 2020 (before the laptop story broke). IFLโs co-founderย Stefanie Friedhoffย serves on the White House Covid-19 Response Team. First Draft staffers were also revealed in the #TwitterFiles to be frequent and trusted partners to a leading public face of the Censorship-Industrial Complex,ย Renee DiResta, now of Stanford University.
What we know about funding: First Draft was funded by a huge number of entities including Craig Newmark, Rockefeller, the National Science Foundation, Facebook, the Ford Foundation, Google, the Knight Foundation, the Wellcome Trust, Open Society Foundations, and more. Funding for the IFL includes the Rockefeller Foundation for a โbuilding vaccine demandโ initiative.
What they do/What they are selling: IFL/First Draft position themselves as the vanguard of disinformation studies, acting as key advisors to media, technology, and public health consortiums, bringing together a wide range of academic skill sets.
Characteristic/worldview quotes: High use of terms likeย coordinated inauthentic behavior,ย information pollution, the future Homeland Security catchwordsย mis-, dis-,ย andย malinformation, andย information disorder.
Gibberish verbiage: โThe most accessible inoculation technique is prebunking โ the process of debunking lies, tactics or sources before they strike.โ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย First Draft is featured extensively in the files. They were theย first proposed nameย when Twitter decided to assemble a small group of โtrusted people to come together to talk about what theyโre seeing,โ were part of theย Aspen Instituteโs Burisma tabletop, and appeared in multipleย emails with Pentagon officials.
Goofy graphage:
Closely connected to: Almost all the leading lights of the CIC, including the Stanford Internet Observatory, the Trusted News Initiative, Shorenstein Center, DFRLabs, the World Economic Forum, the Aspen Institute, Meedan, and Bellingcat.
In sum: With a strong ability to both know and direct emerging trends, and with a large array of elite networks in tow, the IFL will continue to serve as one of the key tastemakers in the โanti-disinformationโ field.
2.โย Meedan
Link:ย https://meedan.com/
Type:ย Medium-sized non-profit specializing in technology and countering โdisinformation.โ
You may have read about them when:ย Meedan ran a range of Covid-19 misinformation initiatives โto support pandemic fact-checking effortsโ with funding from BigTech, the Omidyar Foundation, the National Science Foundation and more. Partners included Britainโs now-disgraced Behavioural Insights Team, or โnudge unit,โ known for scaring the pants off Brits about a range of medical manias. Among Meedanโs โanti-disinformationโ projects is an effort toย peer into private, encrypted messages. The Meedan boardย includesย Tim Hwang (Substack General Counsel),ย free speech skepticย Zeynep Tufecki, and Maria Ressa, a Nobel Prize winner with very close ties to eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and the National Endowment for Democracy. Ressa believes Wikileaks โisnโt journalism.โ Meedan co-founder Muna AbuSulayman was the founding Secretary General of the Saudi Alwaleed bin Talal Foundation. Alwaleed bin Talal is one of the largest shareholders in Twitter, both pre-Elon Musk and now, with Musk.
What we know about funding: Widespread public and private funding including from Omidyar, Twitter, Facebook, Google, the National Science Foundation, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, and more.
What they do/What they are selling: Meedan positions itself as an NGO leader in the โanti-disinformationโ field; convening networks, developing technology, and establishing new initiatives. Strong support and development are given to โfact-checkingโ organizations and building the technology to support them.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โDetection of controversial and hateful content.โ
Gibberish verbiage: โOur work shows that there are far more matches between tipline content and public group messages on WhatsApp than between public group messages and either published fact checks or open social media content.โ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย Minimal in the files at hand, though Meedan isย noted as one of Twitterโs four main Covid โmisinformationโ partners.
Connected to: Twitter, Factcheck.org, AuCoDe, the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, the Behavioral Insights Team, the Oxford Internet Institute, Stanford Internet Observatory, and First Draft.
In sum: Meedan exemplifies the NGO-to-Stasi stylistic shift, where spying and snitching on private messages in the name of โanti-disinformationโ is now considered a public good.
Further reading:
Now They’re Trying Censor Your Text Messages
3.โย Harvard Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy (Technology and Social Change Project)
Link:ย https://shorensteincenter.org/programs/technology-social-change/
Type: An elite academic project once regarded as one of the leading centers in the โanti-disinformationโ field.
You may have read about them when: It wasย announced that the center would be closed in 2024ย on the spurious grounds that project lead Joan Donovan lacked sufficient academic credentials to run the initiative (what was spurious is that it took that long for this realization to come about). Donovan was already widely known for partisanship and getting things wrong, in particularย repeatedly claiming the Hunter Biden laptopย was not genuine. The Shorenstein Center birthed two other key โanti-disinformationโ initiatives, the aforementionedย First Draftย and theย Algorithmic Transparency Initiative. Cameron Hickey, ATIโs lead, is now CEO of the much larger National Congress on Citizenship. Inย this video, Joan Donavan sits alongside Richard Stengel, the first head of the Global Engagement Center, an agency housed in the State Department with a remit to โcounter foreign state and non-state propaganda and disinformation efforts.โ The closing of the Technology and Social Change Project is a minor victory in an otherwise exploding field.
What we know about funding: Money from: the Ford Foundation, Open Society Foundations, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, Gates Foundation, Google, Facebook Journalism Project, and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
What they do/What they are selling: Academic research into โdisinformation,โ a fellows program, field convening, and frequent media commentary. The Shorenstein Center also produces a leading โmisinformation studiesโ journal.
Characteristic/worldview quote: Donovanโsย infamous tweet, posed with anย Atlanticย staffer: โMe and @cwarzel Looking at the content on the Hunter Biden Laptop, the most popular straw man question at #Disinfo2022.โ
Gibberish verbiage: โExamining accuracy-prompt efficacy in combination with using colored borders to differentiate news and social content onlineโ
โHairballโ graph:
Closely connected to: First Draft, Algorithmic Transparency Initiative/NCoC, Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Data and Society, and the Aspen Institute.
In sum: An โanti-disinformationโ project that got it wrong so often, even the center that housed it cut ties.
4.โย The Public Good Projectsย
Link:ย https://www.publicgoodprojects.org/
Type: Non-profit consultancy, specializing in health communications, marketing, technology and โdisinformation.โ
You may have read about them when: Whilst PGP seem to do some front-facing work, they are also guns for hire for a large range of corporate and government programs. Twitter files showย PGP had contracts with biotechย lobby group BIO (whose members include Pfizer and Moderna) to run theย Strongerย campaign, whichย according to Lee Fangย โworked w/Twitter to set content moderation rules around covid โmisinformation.โโ Jennifer McDonald of Twitterโs Public Policy team noted in an email that PGP was also among Twitterโs four โstrongest information sharing partnershipsโ for Covid โmisinformationโ. PGP partnered with UNICEF on the Vaccine Demand Observatory which aims to โdecrease the impact of misinformation and increase vaccine demand around the world.โ The board includes the former CEO of Pepsi and Leviโs, a Morgan Stanley Vice-President, and Merck Pharmaceuticalsโ Director of Public Health Partnerships.
What we know about funding: $1.25 million from BIO as well as partnerships with Google, Rockefeller, and UNICEF.
What they do/What they are selling: A suite of communications activities including marketing, research, media production, social media monitoring, vaccine promotion, and campaigns. They also use AI and natural language processing to โidentify, track, and respond to narratives, trends, and urgent issuesโ in order to โperform fact-checkingโ and โpower behavior change strategies.”
Characteristic/worldview quote: โThink of us as theย BuzzFeedย of public health.โ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย Noted as one of Twitterโs fourย go-to sources for supposed detection of Covid-19 misinformation.
Closely connected to: Twitter, UNICEF, Rockefeller, Kaiser Permanente, First Draft, Brown School of Public Health
In sum: A sophisticated communications and technology outfit with close BigTech and BigPharma partners, and a mission to stop โmisinformation.โ
Further reading:
โ5.โย Graphikaย
Link:ย https://www.graphika.com/ย
Type: For-profit firm with defense connections specializing in โdigital marketing and disinformation & analysis.โ
You may have read about them when: Graphika was one of two outside groups hired in 2017 by the Senate Intelligence Committee to assess the Russian cyber menace. Graphika was also a โcore fourโ partner to Stanfordโsย Election Integrity Partnershipย and itsย Virality Project, both subjects of #TwitterFiles reports. Made headlines for claiming a leak of US-UK trade discussions, publicized by Jeremy Corbyn, was part of an operation called โsecondary Infektionโ traceable to Russia.
Former Director of Investigations Ben Nimmo was previously a NATO press officer and DFRLabs fellow, and is now Facebookโs Global Threat Intelligence Lead. Head of Innovation Camille Francois was previously Google Jigsawโs principal researcher.
What we know about funding:ย $3 million from the Department of Defenseย for 2020-2022, โto support and stimulate basic and applied research and technology at educational institutionsโ; boasts of partnerships with the Defense Advanced Partnerships Research Agency (DARPA) and the U.S. Air Force. According to USAspending.gov, defense agencies haveย provided almost $7 million.
What they do/What they are selling: Long-form reports and subscription services for corporate and governmental clients, often focused on identifying โleading influencersโ and โmisinformation and disinformation risks,โ along with highly sophisticated AI for surveilling social media.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โseeding doubt and uncertainty in authoritative voices leads to a society that finds it too challenging to identify whatโs true.โ
Gibberish verbiage: Tendency to impressively horrific puns (โMore-troll Kombat,โ โLights, Camera, Coordinated Action!โ โStep into my Parlerโ).
โHairballโ graph: Likeย pop art:
In the #TwitterFiles:ย In 2017-2018,ย Twitter was unaware the Senate Intelligence Committee would be sharing their data on supposed Russia-linked accounts with commercial entities.
In sum: With deep Pentagon ties and a patina of public-facing commercial legitimacy, Graphika is set up to be the Rand Corporation of the Anti-Disinformation age.
Connected to: Stanford Internet Observatory, DFRLabs, Department of Defense, DARPA, Knight Foundation, Bellingcat
Further reading:ย https://www.foundationforfreedomonline.com/?page_id=2328
An Intellectual No-Fly Zone: Online Censorship of Ukraine Dissent Is Becoming the New Norm
6.โย Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLabs) of the Atlantic Council
Link:ย https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/programs/digital-forensic-research-lab/
Type: Public-facing disinformation research arm of highly influential, extravagantly funded, NATO-aligned think tank, the Atlantic Council.
You may have read about them when:ย In May of 2018, Facebookย announcedย a โNew Election Partnership With the Atlantic Council,โ to โprevent our service from being abused during elections.โ The announcement was made by former National Republican Senatorial Committee Chief Digital Strategistย Katie Harbath, weeks after a contentious hearing in the Senate in which Mark Zuckerbergย answered questionsย about the โabuse of dataโ on Facebook. The Atlantic Councilโs DFRLabs at the time included such figures as Eliot Higgins (from Bellingcat) and Ben Nimmo, future Director of Investigations at Graphika. This became a watershed moment, as Facebook soon after announced a series of purges ofย accountsย accusedย of โcoordinated inauthentic activity,โ including small indie sites likeย Anti-Media, End The War on Drugs, โMurica Today, Reverb,ย andย Anonymous News, beginning an era of mass deletions.
DFRLab was a coreย partnerย for Stanfordโs โElection Integrity Partnership,โ and the โVirality Project.โ The Atlantic Council also organizes the elite 360/Open Summit whoseย 2018 disinformation edition included the private Vanguard-25 forumย that brought together Madeleine Albright, former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt, the head of the Munich Security Conference, Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa, Edelman (the worldโs biggest PR company), Facebook, Twitter, Microsoft, Bellingcat, Graphika, and more.
What we know about funding: โDFRLab has received grants from the Department of Stateโs Global Engagement Center that support programming with an exclusively international focus,โย Graham Brookie of DFRLabs toldย Racket. The Atlantic Council receives funding from the U.S. Army and Navy, Blackstone, Raytheon, Lockheed, the NATO STRATCOM Center of Excellence and aย long listย of other financial, military, and diplomatic entities.
What they do/What they are selling: Long-form reports, list-making, conference hosting, creation of reporter-friendly widgets (e.g. โForeign Election Interference Tracker,โ โMinsk Monitorโ)
Characteristic/worldview quote: On โrumors about Covid-19s origins,โ particularly the โdisinformationโ that the virus may have originated in a laboratory: โThe cumulative effect of this was to distract the U.S. publicโs attention away from the federal governmentโs disjointed approach to mitigating the virus and point the blame at China.โ
Gibberish verbiage: Awesome quantities; site seethes at publicโs unwillingness to popularizeย nom dโรฉquipeย โDigital Sherlocksโ; insists so often it is relying only on โopen-source informationโ that one doubts it; relies heavily on schlock military (โNarrative Arms Raceโ) and medical (โInfodemicโ) metaphors to describe disinformation threat.
โHairballโ graph: DFRLabsย analysisย of Wuhan rumors:
In the #TwitterFiles:ย Appears with frequency, with the โIndia Listโ of 40,000 names suspected of โHindu nationalismโ being a notable unfortunate episode:
In sum: DFRLabs is not only funded by the Global Engagement Center, and had initial GEC chief Richard Stengel as a fellow, but uses substantial state and corporate resources to evangelize GECโs โecosystemโ theory of disinformation, which holds that views that overlap with foreign threat actors are themselves part of the threat.
Connected to: the Stanford Internet Observatory, University of Washington Center for an Informed Public, Graphika, Bellingcat, and the NYU Center for Social Media and Politics
โ7.โย Stanford Internet Observatoryย
Link:ย https://cyber.fsi.stanford.edu/io
Type: Academic research institution
You may have read about them when:ย The SIO is the parent of two foundational efforts at mass content surveillance and censorship: the โElection Integrity Partnershipโ created ahead of the 2020 presidential vote, and the โVirality Projectโ that created a single ticketing system for six major internet platforms for โmisinformationโ related to Covid-19 vaccines. As notedย by head Alex Stamos, the EIP came together to โfill the gapโ of things โthe government could not do themselves.โ Partners at DFRLabsย addedย that the SIOโs Election Integrity Partnership โcame together in June of 2020 at the encouragement of the U.S. Department of Homeland Securityโs Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA.โ Research Director Renee DiResta is aย former CIA fellow.
What we know about funding: Five-year grant from the National Science Foundation for $748,437. The EIP and Virality Projects also partnered with Graphika and DFRLabs, themselves recipients of funding from the Departments of Defense and State, respectively. SIO was founded with a $5 million grant from Craig Newmark and also receives funds from Omidyar, Gates, Hewlett and others.
What they do/What they are selling: As noted in two Twitter Files reports (seeย hereย andย here), the twin SIO projects represented major efforts to build surveillance and flagging to scale across multiple platforms, seemingly as a proof-of-concept for a potential fully government-run enterprise like the Disinformation Governance Board, the program pushed by their partners at CISA.
Gibberish verbiage: Adept at generating imperious synonyms lauding themselves for being smart and from California (e.g. โconstellation of problem solvers,โ โcoproducing expertise for critical infrastructure protectionโ). Birthed idea of โlong fuseโ of disinformation, suggesting speech dangers need to be cut off early.
โHairballโ graph: EIPย analysisย of โGlendale mail dumpโ rumors in 2020 Election, which incidentally wereย covered by CNN:
In the #TwitterFiles:ย SIO perhaps appears in the TF more than any other academic, think tank or NGO partner. From an email to Twitter from the Virality Project: Twitter was told it should consider as โstandard misinformation on your platformโฆ stories of true vaccine side effectsโฆ true posts which may fuel hesitancy.โ
In sum: The Stanford Internet Observatory may or may not continue to have a high-profile role in building out the CIC, but figures like Renee DiResta and Alex Stamos have already fulfilled a substantial historical function by organizing cross-platform content sweeps for Covid-19 and the 2020 election.
Connected to: Twitter, First Draft, Graphika, the University of Washingtonโs Center for an Informed Public, NYUโs Center for Politics and Social Media, the Aspen Institute, and the DHS agency CISA.
Link:ย https://www.poynter.org/;ย https://www.poynter.org/ifcn/
Type: Private think tank, once known as a media advocacy operation, now known more for the IFCN, which is essentially the in-house fact-checking arm of Facebook/Meta, as well as the fact-checking hubย Politifact.ย Also produces the reporter-friendly widgetย MediaWise.
You may have read about them when:ย Trump was elected andย Poynterย sent anย open letter to Mark Zuckerbergย on behalf of โindependent fact-checking organizationsโ telling him โFacebook should start an open conversation on the principles that could underpin a more accurate news ecosystem,โ which Zuckerberg correctly interpreted as a call for his investment in those same organizations. Later Zuckerberg wasย challenged by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez about the inclusion ofย The Daily Callerย in its body of fact-checkers, and Zuckerberg tried to imply the IFCN was a fully independent body, leaving out both its funding relationship (see below) and its ability to exercise vetoes over IFCN members. Humor sidebar: Dr. Anthony Fauci was asked โAre you still confident that [Covid-19] developed naturally?โย at aย Poynterย โFestival of Fact-Checking,โ and stuns audiences by saying, โNo, Iโm not convinced of that.โ
What we know about funding: Over $4 million a year goes from Facebook to IFCN partner organizations. Poynter andย Politifactย meanwhile list the Craig Newmark Foundation, the Koch Foundation, the Knight Foundation, the Omidyar Network, the National Endowment for Democracy, Microsoft, and theย Washington Postย as funders, among others.
What they do/What they are selling: At-scale, enterprise effort to fact-check earth.ย Politifact, founded in 2007, transformed the entire idea of fact-checking, which used to be a private, in-house journalistic exercise, in which fact-checkers made sure reported statements were defensible and/or had a factual basis, a process designed to protect against litigation. Now, fact-checking is sold as an outward-facing, affirmative concept, in which things can be pronounced true/false by an institutional authority, whose judgments can then be used as the basis for algorithmic reviews.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โNeeds context.โ
Gibberish verbiage: Little to none. IFCN/Politifactย are mostly operated and maintained by people with relationships to journalism, and its products are designed to be consumed by broad audiences.
In the #TwitterFiles:ย In an election slack, the FBI asks about two tweets, and a Twitter trust and safety staffer citesย Politifactย as the authority for striking a piece of content, writing: โThis is proven to be false via this.โ
In sum: The IFCN in particular is a huge-scale fact-checking operation whose conflicted relationship with Meta/Facebook may provide a template for future truth contractors.
โ9.โย Integrity Initiative / Institute for Statecraft
Link:ย https://www.statecraft.org.uk/ย for official page; link to Integrity Initiative documents leaked by Anonymousย here.
Type: Shady-as-F spookworld surveillance and information control plan that will send you voiding in terror
You may have read about them when:ย The hacker Anonymous in late 2018 published a series of documents showing the British Foreign Office funded a broad anti-disinformation scheme, centered around the construction of geographic โclustersโ of anti-disinformation warriors under the guidance of Britainโs Institute for Statecraft. The initial list of cluster participants included many names whoโd go on to become central players in anti-disinformation, from then-NATO press officer (and future Graphika Director of Investigations) Ben Nimmo to would-be Disinformation Governance Board chief Nina Jankowicz to ex-Obama defense official (and McCain Institute head) Evelyn Farkas to the journalist Anne Applebaum. The leak was big newsย in England, because it contained damning passages showing the British Foreign Office identified Jeremy Corbyn as a โuseful idiotโ for Russia, but made few headlines in the U.S.
What we know about funding: The leaked documents showed 2016-2017 public funding of ยฃ296,500, with a planned increase to ยฃ1,961,000 the next year; those numbers wereย citedย by multiple official bodies, including the UK parliament.
What they do/What they are selling: All public traces of the Integrity Initiative, whose tweeting history showed wide interest in identifying Western figures as linked to Russia and other actors, were shut down after the Anonymous leak in late 2018. A subsequentย report by the OSCR, the Scottish charity regulator, makes for frightening reading. It describes the activities of the Institute for Statecraft, technically listed as a โcharity,โ as โnot entirely charitable,โ adding that โone of its most significant activities, a project known as the Integrity Initiative, did not provide public benefit.โ
Characteristic/worldview quote: โAlthough the principle [sic] target is Russian disinformation and influence, where appropriate clusters also consider other sources of interference where these interact with the Russians.โ Also: โThe clusterโs main means of influence is through select journalists.โ
Gibberish verbiage: โPerformance indicatorsโ include โincreased education of the younger generation on disinformation and threats.โ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย FBI forwards to Twitter the British Parliamentary report on Russian influence:ย โWe are grateful to those outside the Intelligence Community โ in particular Anne Applebaum, William Browder, Christopher Donnelly, Edward Lucas and Christopher Steele โ for volunteering their very substantial expertise on Russia.โ
In sum:ย Straight Outta Orwell! The Integrity Initiative documents represent one of the most consequential intelligence leaks of all time โ the very dirty underpants of NATO.
Link:ย https://ncoc.org/ย https://ati.io/
Type: A post-WWII, congressionally chartered civic organization that bizarrely has turned its attention to the cause of โanti-disinformationโ and censorship. The Algorithmic Transparency Institute (ATI) is a sub-initiative of the NCoC.
You may have read about them when:ย They signed up as EIP and Virality Project partners to help โenable their analysts to monitor across networks.โ Via itsย Junkipediaย initiative, ATI contributed the creepy tactic of โcivic listeningโ in order to โinvestigate narratives.โ Junkipedia โenables manual and automated collection of data from across the spectrum of digital communication platforms including open social media, fringe networks, and closed messaging apps.โ Thatโs right, theyโll even peer into your private conversations to โenable real-time situational awarenessโ in order to โcounter problematic content.โ Snitches can submit reports via โtiplines.โ ATI will then โwork with many newsroomsโ and โpipe the resulting information into the proper state-focused channels for rapid response work.โ Youโve been reported to the government. Taking it to the next level, ATI also runs the โCivic Listening Corps,โ โa volunteer network of individuals trained to monitor for, critically evaluate, and report misinformation.โ
Origins: ATIโs leadership emerged out of the Shorenstein Centerโs soon to be closed Technology and Social Change Project. Cameron Hickey led the ATI and has since been promoted to CEO of NCoC. NCoCโs former board chair Garret Graff is director of the Aspen Instituteโs cybersecurity and technology program. Graff was a key player in the Aspen Instituteโs Augustย 2020 Hunter Biden laptop โhack and dumpโ tabletop. As board chair, Graffโs record of following the rules is in question, given one is: โNCoC is strictly nonpartisan, and does not support or oppose any candidate or party.โ
What we know about funding: NCoC draws funding from many of the usual suspects, including Omidyar, Craig Newmark, and the Knight Foundation, as well as McArthur, Reset.tech, Rockefeller, Gates Foundation, and the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
What they do/What they are selling: Technology to monitor social media including private messaging, snitching to government and media, ethnic media coordination, training and volunteer coordination.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โViral misinformation is contagious and dangerous. Join the fight and stop the spreadโ; โcentralize the collection of problematic contentโ; โa series of automated processes extract important data related to the content, like geographic location, engagement data, image text, andย notable facesย in images.โ
Gibberish verbiage: โEffective inoculation messagingโ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย Former NCoC board chair Garret Graff sent the now-infamous โStephen was rightโ email outing Twitter, the New York Times, NBC News, theย Washington Post,ย Rolling Stone, First Draft, CNN and more as having rehearsed their response in advance to the Hunter Biden laptop leak, before running their own disinformation campaign to counter what turned out to be a true story.
Other than that the only appearance is an Election Integrity Partnership โall handsโ request from Stanfordโs Alex Stamos that includes then Algorithmic Transparency Institute CEO Cameron Hickey.
In sum: Often the technical and โcommunitiesโ partner in censorship initiatives. In promoting Cameron Hickey to NCoC CEO, the logic of ATI has now been ported to a large-scale congressionally chartered organization.
โ11.โย Park Advisorsย
Link:ย https://www.state.gov/defeat-disinfo/
Type:ย For-profit firm funded by the State Departmentโs Global Engagement Center (GEC) specializing in โsolutions to pressing issues such as Disinformation, Terrorism, Violent Extremism, Hate Speech, Human Trafficking, and Money Laundering.โ
You may have read about them when:ย Park Advisors received funding from the GECโs Technology Engagement Team (TET) in 2018 to develop Disinfo Cloud, a dashboard for evaluating and implementing counter-disinformation tools. In addition to Disinfo Cloud, TET commissioned the study โWeapons of Mass Distraction: Foreign State-Sponsored Disinformation in the Digital Age,โ presenting vulnerabilities to disinformation on social media platforms. Park Advisors also collaborated with the Department of Homeland Securityโs Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), Dutch media group DROG, and GEC to create the game โHarmony Square,โ which it claims is a โpsychological โvaccineโ against disinformation.โ
What we know about funding: Direct fundingย from the U.S. Department of State GECย on Disinfo Cloud and disinformation studies.
What they do/What they are selling:ย Created a digital database for tools and technologies aimed at countering disinformation and propaganda for corporate clients, academics, as well as U.S. and foreign government partners. Long-form reports on disinformation vulnerabilities, international policy expertise and international counter-terrorism coordination tools.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โA growing number of states, in the pursuit of geopolitical ends, are leveraging digital tools and social media networks to spread narratives, distortions, and falsehoods to shape public perceptions and undermine trust in the truth.โ
Goofy graph:
Closely connected to:ย The Census Bureau, U.S. Congress, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, Department of Homeland Security, Department, Department of State, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Office of Global Affairs, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Treasury Department, U.S. Agency for Global Media, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture
In sum:ย A now defunct (and hard to find) disinformation advisory group, connected to GEC, that created a digital testbed for โcounter-disinformationโ tools
โ12.โย New Knowledge AI, rebranded as Yonder AI, acquired by Primer
Link:ย https://primer.ai/products/yonder/
Type:ย For-profit internet company that worked for brands and national security entities searching platforms for narrative control, along with detecting narrative manipulation from malign actors.
You may have read about them when: New Knowledge did a much publicized report for the Senate Intelligence Committee in 2018 that said Russians saturated U.S. social media with disinformation to influence the 2016 election. Days after research director Renee DiResta delivered the report, the media revealed that New Knowledge, working with a former Obama White House aide, had run an online dirty tricks operation intended to make it appear that the Kremlin supported the Republican running for Senate in Alabama. They did it by creating thousands of fake Russian Twitter followers for candidate Roy Moore, who narrowly lost the race. The operation was funded by LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman. New Knowledge was paid $100,000 for the Alabama campaign. Tax records show its parent corporation, Popily, Inc., was paid $575,000 for research consulting by Advance Democracy, a non-profit run by oppo researcher Dan Jones, a Democratic Party liaison to Silicon Valley funders. New Knowledge created an election dashboard called Disinfo2018 for Jonesโ Advance Democracy.ย (See entry 48.)
Also: New Knowledge founder Jonathan Morgan was one of the creators of theย Hamilton 68 dashboard, under the auspices of the Alliance for Securing Democracy. Former FBI agent Clint Watts was a frontman for the dashboard and made it among the biggest sources of news in the lead up to the midterm elections. Hamilton 68 claimed to track Russian disinformation by monitoring 644 active Russian accounts. The Twitter Files have revealed that most of the accounts Hamilton 68 monitored belonged to Americans, not Russians.
What we know about funding:ย Morgan founded New Knowledge in Austin in 2015. He and DiResta have told interviewers they were consulted by the Obama White House as concerns grew about the internet being used by ISIS, white supremacists, and other bad actors. Within a year, it had 50 employees, Morgan told the Austin American Statesman. Some had been analysts in the intelligence world; Morgan had worked on two open-source programs for Defense Advanced Partnerships Research Agency (DARPA), he has said; another senior official spent 15 years at the NSA. New Knowledge had $30 million in investment money. He sought more investments after the Alabama scandal led to a โrebrandโ of the company in 2019 to โYonder AI.” Investors include Lux Capital, Geekdom Fund, GGV Capital, Buildgroup, Capital Factory and Kelly Perdew, co-founder of Moonshots, owner of Fast Point Games. Lux Capital advisory board member, and former SOCOM Commander Tony Thomas, also sits on the Primer advisory board.
What they are selling:ย Management of brand narratives and narrative manipulation detection and analysis. New Knowledge/Yonder searched for certain words and avatars it assessed were often used by particular groups of malign users. Seeking user language that reveals โcontextual narrativesโ helped detect subtle signs of manipulation across accounts.
Worldview quote:ย โYonder is on a mission to humanize the worldโs information and deliver on the promise of a more authentic internetโฆYonder will talk to the industry about an ethical framework for AI.โ
Gibberish verbiage:ย โThe Yonder platform is the first to map the faction internet, finding, describing and measuring the impact of factions on conversations that matter to customers.โ
In the #TwitterFiles: Former Head of Trust and Safety at Twitter, Yoel Roth, on โHamilton 68โ account owners:
โThese accounts are neither strongly Russian nor strongly bots.โ
โNo evidence to support the statement that the dashboard is a finger on the pulse of Russian information ops.โ
โHardly evidence of a massive influence campaign.โ
โI think we need to just call this out on the bullshit it is.โ
โ13.โย Moonshot CVEย
Link:ย https://moonshotteam.com
Type:ย For-profit tech company working with public and private industry partners to detect and prevent online hate.
You may have read about them when: Moonshot, working with the U.S. Military Academy, produced a report on domestic violent extremism within the military. The report included the geolocation of service members searching specific hate terms, identifying concentrated areas on military bases. The parameters of the study came under scrutiny due to the terms and phrases considered โhate speech,โ including โthe truth about Black Lives Matter.โ Moonshotโs goal, once they identify patterns of online searches for hate and extremist ideology, is to use their โredirect method,โ sending advertisements to guide people away to โconstructive alternative messages.โ The redirect method came under flack when it directed people to a prior-felon touting anarchist and antisemitic views. The tech company has received additional criticism based on co-founder Vidhya Ramalingamโs connection to the Obama Foundation, as a part of the Leaders Europe program.
What we know about funding:ย Moonshot, since its founding in 2015, has primarily been financed by venture capital firms, such as Beringea and Mercia.
What they do/What they are selling:ย Online threat monitoring and reporting services, including periodic and โincident responseโ reporting. Moonshot also markets intervention capabilities, including counter-messaging and their aforementioned โRedirect Method.โ
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โA growing number of states, in the pursuit of geopolitical ends, are leveraging digital tools and social media networks to spread narratives, distortions, and falsehoods to shape public perceptions and undermine trust in the truth.โ
Goofy graph:
Connected to:ย Obama Foundation, Department of State, Wilson Center, Anti-Defamation League, Institute for Strategic Dialogue, Google Jigsaw
Worldview quote:ย โThe lessons learned in addressing the underlying drivers to violent extremism offline simply werenโt being applied effectively online, where extremist propagandists and recruiters continue to prey on vulnerable individualsโฆ we work to better understand and disrupt disinformation networks, gender-based violence, child sexual abuse and exploitation, and organized crime, among other harms.โ
โ14.โย Annenberg Public Policy Center (home of Factcheck.org)ย
Link:ย www.annenbergpublicpolicycenter.org
Type: Privately funded Public Policy Research Center affiliated with the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania.
You may have read about them when: โAPPCโs motto is โResearch and Engagement That Matter,โ and its work has informed the policy debates around campaign finance, childrenโs television, internet privacy, tobacco advertising, the tone of discourse in Washington, and disinformation. Scholars at the policy center have offered guidance to journalists covering difficult stories, including terrorist threats, suicide, mental health, the Zika virus, and vaccination hesitancy.โ
What we know about funding: Seed and ongoingย fundingย for the center came from a $2 billion bequest from Walter Annenberg, a businessman and Richard Nixonโs choice for Ambassador to the Court of Saint James (UK) from 1969-1974 who owned โTriangle Publicationsโ which featuredย Seventeen Magazine, The Daily Racing Form, and TV Guideย under their media umbrella.
What they do/What they are selling: A forum for discussions of key public policy issues, an educational spin-off, research in elections, child-rearing, suicide prevention, civics and mental health, and factcheck.org.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โThe Annenberg Public Policy Center community celebrates the life and mourns the passing of statesman George P. Shultz, who served as secretary of state under President Ronald Reagan and secretary of labor and treasury under President Richard Nixon, and was a close friend of Ambassadors Leonore and Walter Annenberg. Shultz was also a longtime friend of theย Annenberg Public Policy Centerย (APPC) of the University of Pennsylvania andย The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands, where he was a frequent guest.โ
Gibberish verbiage: โThe Transatlantic High Level Working Group on Content Moderation Online and Freedom of Expression is seeking to identify and encourage adoption of scalable solutions to reduce hate speech, violent extremism and viral deception online, while protecting freedom of expression and a vibrant, global internet.โ (Source)
Sample graph:
Twitter Files Reference:ย The University of Pennsylvania Distinguished Fellow and Project Director Susan Ness, who was appointed aย Commissionerย at the Federal Communications Commission by President Clinton in 1994, sent Twitterโs Nick Pickles a final report from the Transatlantic Working Groupโs final report on Moderating Content online and Freedom of Expression, in preparation for a โcandid and off-the-record conversation.โ
In Sum:ย The Annenberg Public Policy Center is one tentacle of the Annenberg Foundationโs larger influence operation masquerading as a think tank. Its analysis is informed by and ultimately loyal to the ghosts of Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Queen Elizabeth and Walter Annenberg (the guy that used to publish the โDaily Racing Formโ which is โknown for being Americaโs Turf Authority since 1894 and provides news and data to horse racing enthusiasts).โ
โ15.โย German Marshall Fundโs Alliance for Securing Democracyย
Link:ย democracy.gmfus.org
Type: Public Policy Think Tank/ Grant-making institution.
You may have read about them when: Theyย helped fundย or served as a pass-through vessel for State Department money going to Hamilton 68, a 2016 effort to โtrack Russian interferenceโ that applied the โRussian influenceโ label to people who were not being influenced by the Russians, but were skeptical of one thing or another in theย broader narrativeย adopted by the Atlantic Council, Stanford Internet Observatory, Brookings, or the National Endowment for Democracy.
What we know about funding: โThe German Marshall Fund of the United States was founded in 1972 through a gift from Germany as a tribute to the Marshall Plan.โ Their funders at the $1 million dollar level and above include the European Commission, the Directorate General for Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations, Auswaertiges Amt, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Norway, the U.S. Agency for International Development and the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs. At the $100-999K level, funders include Google, Microsoft, Open Society, Rockefeller Foundation, the Charles Mott Foundation (who also fund Clemson Universityโs disinformation efforts), the Knight Foundation, Latviaโs Ministry of Defense, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for Belgium.
What they do/What they are selling: In the โprioritiesโ section of their website itโs noted that โGMF works on issues critical to transatlantic interests in the 21st century, including the future of democracy, security and geopolitics, alliances and the rise of China, and technology and innovation.โ
Characteristic/worldview quote: โThe surge of authoritarian threats, political polarization, and widening social inequalities continue to fuel democratic backsliding and undermine the democratic values on which our systems and institutions rest. The urgency to confront these global crises require societies to strengthen their resilience and reimagine democracyโs future.โย From Future of Democracy
Gibberish verbiage: โLaissez-faire globalization is at the breaking point. The Covid-19 pandemic and Russiaโs invasion of Ukraine finally exposed the fragility of the global economic system after decades of strain caused by the rise of China, and exacerbated by climate change and growing inequality. Now, U.S. leadership is needed to ensure that nationalist and authoritarian forces do not fill the resulting structural vacuum in an increasingly digital world. A new roadmap is needed for how democracies and their allies will address the technological challenges of the 21st century.โ From โThe New American Foreign Policy of Technologyโ
Infamous โHamilton 68โ graph:
Twitter Files Reference:ย The ASD-created Hamilton 68 is detailed inย Twitter Files#15ย and is the subject of many, many Twitter communications about suspected Russian bot accounts. Twitter executives like Carlos Monje were anxious to stay close to the โlonger gameโ rather than confront the ASD about the Hamilton 68 problem.
In sum: The German Marshall Fund is a large pass-through for funding from the U.S. and other NATO governments as well as the largest industrialists in those nations to try to shape public perception through front organizations.
โ16.โย Ad Council
Link:ย https://www.adcouncil.org/
Type: Nonprofit/Media
You may have read about them when: They started the drunk driving prevention campaign โFriends Donโt Let Friends Drive Drunk,โ and also created the Smokey the Bear character.
What we know about funding: The Ad Council is funded by the largest companies in the world. Comcast, Google and Meta all gave Ad Council more than $400K, while Adobe, Apple, Johnson & Johnson, Disney, TikTok, Verizon and Walmart gave between $300-399K. Donations in the $200-299K bracket came from Accenture, Amazon, Bank of America, Pfizer, and Twitter, among others. IBM, Fox, JP Morgan Chase kicked in at the 150K-199K level, but virtually all its funding comes fromย Fortune 500 corporations.
What they do/What they are selling: The Ad Council attempts to influence large numbers of people through advertising for what it considers the public good. Initially founded in 1941, they were known as the War Advertising Council, and ran campaigns to promote women in the workplace, due to the massive influx of men into the military.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โThe Ad Councilโs mission is to convene the best storytellers to educate, unite and upliftโby opening hearts, inspiring action and accelerating change. We wonโt stop until we live in a society where every single person can thrive.โ
Twitter Files Reference:ย One of Twitterโs main four Covid-19 misinfo advisors. Specifically, advanced a project to increase vaccine demand:
In sum: An advertising behemoth created by the largest corporations in WWII to sell war is still, well, doing that.
โ17.โย Clemson University Media Forensics Hub
Link:ย https://www.clemson.edu/centers-institutes/watt/hub/
Type: Public-Private Research Institute
You may have read about them when: They were formed in 2020 โin order to build upon the nationally recognized research performed by Clemson University faculty who were among the first to identify the organized campaign of Russian interference in theย 2016 U.S. presidential election.โ Clemson University Media Forensics hub scholars published โThe Real Target of Authoritarian Disinformationโ inย Foreign Affairsย about Russiaโs โInternet Research Agencyโ;ย theyโve worked with the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Law Enforcement agencies and the U.S.ย Army Cyber Command.
What we know about funding:ย $3.8 million grantย from theย Knight Foundationย to study and fight online disinformation in November of 2022 (matched by Clemson University to bring total investment to $7.6 million). They are housed in a building constructed with a $5.5 million dollar gift from Dr. Charles Watt, who was formerly Dean of Clemsonโs College of Business and Behavioral Science, a defense contractorย businessman with a contractย withย SPAWAR Charlestonย (now known as NAVWARSYSCOM, the Navyโs Electronic Systems Command). One of Wattโs specialties was in what the military calls C3Iโ(Command, Control, Communications, Intelligence) & C4I (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence). Before that he was theย Director of Defense, Test and Evaluationย in theย Office of the Secretary of Defense during the Reagan Administrationย when the priority of that office was the Strategic Defense Initiative.
What they do/What they are selling: Multi-disciplinary research with โdirect social impacts.โ A mission statement full of buzzwords about the โcommon goodโ, tools for social media analysis such asย Botometerย (checks an accountโs activity and gives it a score indicating the likelihood it is a bot) orย Tweetbeaver (works at a granular level, digging out information from your or any public account).
โResearchers with the Hub study disinformation and inauthenticity online and create tools to educate people and stop the spread of disinformation.โ These tools include โhelp[ing] older adults recognize online scams and disinformation,โ โtroll spottingโ and the โConvergence Acceleratorโ in cooperation with theย USGโs National Science Foundation. โThe Convergence Accelerator program model includes three phases: topic identification and convergence research phases 1 and 2. Teams that complete the convergence research phases are expected to deliver high-impact solutions that meet societal needs and continue to have an impact after NSF support ends.โ
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย Mission Statement: โThe Media Forensics Hub at Clemson University builds societyโs capacity to understand the context, origins, and impact of modern media. As part of the Watt Family Innovation Center, we accomplish this by connecting scientific expertise with practical application.โ
Gibberish verbiage: One study of Russian and American partisan groups โexplored how their operations deviated from canonical state propaganda marked by symbols of national identity and heroic masculinityโ (Russia: Strategy/Tactics/Impact 2021)
Twitter Files Reference:ย In 2020, Twitterโsย Nick Picklesย wrote that he shared Yoel Rothโs frustration that CUMFH โdidnโt take any sort of guidanceโ on what theyโve found vis a vis the Internet Research Agency. Roth in another email added that Clemson researchers were โtoo chummy with HPSCI,โ i.e. the House Intel Committee, and didnโt โhave the chops.โ
In sum: Communications professors at Clemson managed to secure a lot of funding from a retired academic and defense contractor who played a very critical role in the Strategic Defense Initiative under the Reagan Administration for a social media analysis/disinformation center, built largely to feed information to journalists that Twitterโs own analyses consistently refuted.
โ18.โย Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)ย
Link:ย www.cisa.gov
Type: Government agency; a division within the Department of Homeland Security that is the โoperational lead for federal cybersecurity and the national coordinator for critical infrastructure security and resilience.โ Founded in 2018, it quickly took on a role in election security, declaring the electoral process critical national infrastructure.
You may have read about them when: Their inaugural director, Christopher Krebs, was fired by President Donald Trumpย via tweetย after CISA released a statement, saying on November 12, 2020, โThe November 3rd Election was the most secure in American history.โ
What we know about funding: Reportedly, a $3 billion dollar budget.
What they do/What they are selling: CISA is supposed to be the lead agency on protecting critical infrastructure and repelling cyber-attacks; โdesigned for collaboration and partnership,โ CISA also partners with civilian corporations, universities and research centers, notably including Stanfordโs Election Integrity Partnership.
Characteristic/worldview quote: โCISAโs cybersecurity mission is to defend and secure cyberspace by leading national efforts to drive and enable effective national cyber defense, resilience of national critical functions, and a robust technology ecosystem.โ Their motto is โdefend today, secure tomorrow.โ
Gibberish verbiage: At the 2020 RSA Conference, Director Chris Krebs explained that the agency has an additional motto โย โcybersecurity has a posseโ โย underscoring the role everyone plays in building resiliency and defending the nation from cyber threats.
โWe send [threat information] out in an anonymized way,โ Krebs explained.ย โWhat weโre trying to do here is understand the landscape โย understand the conditions on top of it, and what the adversary might be doing โย and get that out so the next victim might not happen. This is particularly important in the broader ransomware conversation.โ
Twitter Files Reference:ย In an email fromย Special Agent Elvis M. Chan of the FBI to Yoel Roth, a formal relationship between Twitter, the FBI, and CISA is outlined:
In sum: A new sub-agency of Homeland Security with a monster budget, strong university connections, and a giant purview to the middle of a bureaucratic morass of various other federal agencies and departments, all of whom also have a piece of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure protection portfolio; has rivals in DoD, Department of Energy, FBI, Secret Service and among the intelligence community.
โ19.โย Bellingcatย
Link:ย https://www.bellingcat.com/
Type: For-profit Netherlands based investigative journalism organization that seems mostly to investigate and/or denouonce the practitioners of journalism.
You may have read about them when: Bellingcat is an independent investigative journalism organization, self-styled as an โIntelligence Agency for the People.โ It was founded by former Atlantic Council DFRLabs fellow, Eliot Higgins. In the intelligence agency spirit, Bellingcatโs staff and contributors are littered with former intelligence and government officials. For instance, multiple contributors work at the Center for Information Resilience, a counter-disinformation non-profit with former โdisinformation czarโ Nina Jankowicz as their vice president. To add to its spook persona, the journalism collective receives funding from the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), a shadowy organization called the โsugar daddy of overt operationsโ by theย Washington Post, doing โopenly what had once been unspeakably covert โ dispensing money to anti-communist forces behind the Iron Curtain.โ Bellingcat was named in a proposed consortium of counter-disinformation NGOs โ including the Atlantic Councilโs DFRLabs โ called the EXPOSE Network, organized by the Zinc Network under the UKโs Counter Disinformation and Media Development Programme. This revelation was included in the 2018 release of the Institute of Statecraftโs Integrity Initiative documents by the hacktivist group Anonymous.
What we know about funding:ย While Bellingcat touts that it doesnโt solicit or accept funding or contributions directly from any โnational government,โ NED has been a donor since at least 2017. That same year, Bellingcat received funding from Meedan, one of Twitterโs trusted Covid-19 disinformation sharing partners. In 2020, Bellingcat received โฌ160,000 from Zinc Network, a communications network that designs โbehavioral science informed interventions that change attitudes and actions.โ
What they do/What they are selling:ย Independent investigative journalism, relying heavily on open source intelligence (OSINT).
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โEven seemingly โharmlessโ disinformation normalizes the distortion of reality, with potentially deadly consequences.โ
Closely connected to:ย The Open Societies Foundation, Human Rights Foundation, NED, Zinc Network, Integrity Initiative, Graphika, Atlantic Council/DFRLabs.
In sum:ย The โindependentโ journalist consortiumโs spook-a-rific investor group and malodorous contributor roster call into question its agenda-free reporting.
20.โย Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA)
Link:ย https://cepa.org/
Type:ย CEPA is a nonprofit public policy institution based in Washington, D.C. with theย missionย โto ensure a strong and enduring transatlantic alliance rooted in democratic values and principles.โ
You may have read about them when:ย CEPA employees are frequently quoted in the news aboutย European affairsย and on theย Russia-Ukraine war. Itย saidย โUS complicityโ in the sabotage of Nord Stream pipelines was โdisinformation.โ On March 29, 2023 CEPA published anย articleย concluding โRussia remains the likeliest culpritโ of the destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines.
CEPA has been a proponent of escalating the war on online misinformation. It hasย proposedย that U.S. and European sanctions against Russia should include bans of โRussian officials and oligarchs from Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.โ In anย articleย entitled โMidterm Alert: Silicon Valley is Losing the Fight Against Misinformation,โ CEPA concluded: โSocial media companies acknowledge the pervasiveness of mis- and disinformation on their platforms and the threat it [sic] poses to democracy. They now need to step up their investments to combat the scourge.โ
What we know about funding:ย CEPAโs list of supporters for theย 2022 Fiscal Yearย includes the National Endowment for Democracy (which isย heavily funded by the U.S. government), the NATO Public Policy Division, Lockheed Martin, Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, BAE Systems, Google, the Russia Strategic Initiative, U.S. European Command (Department of Defense), and the U.S. Department of State. The State Department and Department of Defense have (combined)ย providedย over $1 million in grants to CEPA since 2016. CEPAโs December 2020ย reportย on Democratic Offense Against Disinformation was โco-funded by the European Union.โ
What they do/What they are selling:ย CEPA aims to further transatlantic cooperation on issues such as the support of democracy, digital regulation, and defense. One of its mainย goalsย is to โensure the United States and its closest allies can maintain their strategic edge in an increasingly contested world.โ It employs a number of โexpertsโ who bring โinnovative policy solutions to the most critical issues facing the transatlantic alliance.โ
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โDemocracies arenโt goodโ at spreading disinformation.ย Source
Gibberish verbiage:ย โNATO should emphasize the role it can play in defending all humans that shareย transatlantic valuesย โ not necessarily through military interventions but through diplomatic, humanitarian, and political means.โ Also: โOur cutting-edge analysis and timely debates galvanize communities of influence while investing in the next generation of leaders to understand and address present and future challenges toย transatlantic values and principles.โ
Twitter Files Reference:ย An e-mail from Dr. Alina Polyakova, President and CEO of CEPA, to Twitterโs Nick Pickles, hinting at info about the head of the GEC. Polyakova is also included in Twitterโs elite disinformation Signal group.
Closely connected to:ย Brookings Institute, Atlantic Council/DFRLabs, European Union, State Department, Department of Defense, SIO, Graphika, GEC.
In sum:ย CEPA seeks to advance transatlantic political โvaluesโ and strengthen transatlantic cooperation to โensureย our collective defense and future security.โ
Venezuelan Lawyer Laila Tajeldine: Alex Saab is a Political Prisoner of the US Empire (Interview)
โ21.โย Center for an Informed Public at the University of Washingtonย
Link:ย https://www.cip.uw.edu
Type:ย An academic โmultidisciplinary research centerโ with theย missionย to โresist strategic misinformation, promote an informed society and strengthen democratic discourse.โ
You may have read about them when:ย CIPย co-foundedย the Virality Project, along with the Stanford Internet Observatory, NYUโs Center for Social Media and Politics and Tandon School of Engineering, Graphika, DFRLabs, and the National Conference on Citizenship. The Virality Project โworked withย social media platforms to flag and suppress commentary on Covid vaccines, science, and policy that contradicted public health officialsโ stances, even when that commentary was true.โ The Virality Project alsoย describedย opposition to Vaccine Passports as anti-vaccine behavior, and would describe as disinformation โeventsโ things like a news story that “increased distrust in Fauciโs expert guidance.โ CIP also participated in The Election Integrity Partnership, (EIP) along with the Stanford Internet Observatory, Graphika, and DFRLabs. The EIP, a proponent of aggressive social media censorship, partnered with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency in 2020 and released aย reportย on misinformation during the 2020 election.
What we know about funding:ย In 2019 The University of Washington wasย awardedย $5 million in funding from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation to establish the CIP. In June 2021, the CIPย announcedย a โ$1 million gift from Craig Newmark Philanthropies to support the multidisciplinary research centerโs rapid-response research of election-related mis- and disinformation.โ August 2021: The CIPย announcedย a $3 million grant from the National Science Foundation โto apply collaborative, rapid-response research to mitigate online disinformationโ in partnership with the Stanford Internet Observatory. The CIP received $2.25 million from that grant. Other fundersย includeย Microsoft and the University of Washingtonโs iSchool, Technology & Social Change Group, and Population Health Initiative.
What they do/What they are selling:ย CIP has undertaken projects that research misinformation and projects that look into how fact-checking can be scaled and sustained online without compromising quality. CIP researchers have written about ways to combat misinformation online, and CIP holds workshops for high schoolers on how to spot misleading information, debunk data and improve reasoning skills.
Characteristic/worldview quotes: โWe have assembledย world-class researchers, labs, thought leaders, and practitioners to translate research about misinformation and disinformation into policy, technology design, curriculum development, and public engagement.โ Fromย Jevin West, Center co-founder: โI study the Science of Science and worry about the spread of misinformation. My laboratory consists of millions of scholarly papers and public posts about science.โ
Gibberish verbiage:ย โExploreย the depths of misinformation with fun and collaborative games.โ
Twitter Files Reference:ย The Virality Project and the EIP – projects the CIP helped form and lead – were involved in flagging content and recommended social media platforms take action against โtrue content which might promote vaccine hesitancy.โ
Closely connected to:ย Virality Project, Election Integrity Partnership, Stanford Internet Observatory, Graphika, NYU CSMaP and Tandon School of Engineering, the National Conference on Citizenship, DFRLabs, Aspen Institute, Information Futures Lab/First Draft.
In sum:ย Through public and private financing, the CIP used its academic status to help with some of the largest censorship efforts targeting speech relating to the 2020 election and Covid-19.
โ22.โย Aspen Instituteย
Type:ย The Aspen Institute is a neoliberal global nonprofit ostensibly โcommitted to realizing a free, just, and equitable societyโ that has the rep (and the geographical profile) of an American Davos.
You may have read about them when:ย The Aspen Institute holds its annual โIdeas Festivalโ and summits featuring state leaders and elected officials of both parties, notable bureaucrats, journalists and professors, executives and โthought leaders.โ Highlights from Aspen include:
What we know about funding:ย The Aspen Institute is a fundraising powerhouse, receivingย over $140 millionย in contributions and grants in 2021. According toย USAspending.gov, the Aspen Institute has received tens of millions of dollars in grants and contracts from the U.S. government, primarily from the State Department, but also from USAID.
The following entities and foundations are listed by Aspen as donors of over $500,000 or more, with many donating over $1 million: the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; Johnson & Johnson; JP Morgan Chase Foundation; Walmart; Blackrock; and the Open Society Foundation.
What they do/What they are selling:ย The Aspen Instituteย markets itselfย as a leader in bringing together leaders from a variety of fields โ government, scholarship, business โ โto address some of the worldโs most complex problems.โ Theย Aspen Strategy Group, co-chaired by Condoleezza Rice, holds annual forums to โprovide a bipartisan forum to explore the preeminent foreign policy challenges the United States faces.โ
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โWeโreย buildingย a more inclusive economy through our partnership with Mastercard.โ
Gibberish verbiage:ย Nervous tic around the word โinfodemic,โ resulting in an infodemic video series providing aย deep diveย โinto the costs of science misappropriation and denialism and offering solutions to the challenges science faces globally,โ as well as an infodemicย virtual panelย led by Dr. Claire Wardle, who โoffered a clear and concise picture of what disinformation is, and how we might go about protecting our society from it.โ They even discussed the infodemic as aย problem feedingย โdistrust in our institutionsโ that โaffects all aspects of modern life.โ But, good news: โThe Private sector will stand up for trust and fight the infodemic.โ
Twitter Files Reference:ย Garret Graff, Head of Aspen Digital,ย sentย an invite email to Facebook, First Draft, Twitter, The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Yahoo! News, and others. He states โBring your most devious and cynical imaginations! Please keep this document confidential to yourselves; for various reasons, we donโt want this to circulate widely.โ
He also jokes after theย release of the laptop:
Closely connected to:ย The State Department, the Stanford Internet Observatory, First Draft/Information Futures Lab; the National Conference on Citizenship, and the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy, in addition to a boatload of mainstream media figures and international wine-set celebs like Prince Harry.
In sum:ย The Aspen Institute is an influential organization that receives tens of millions of dollars in funding from the U.S. government to comprehensively advance solutions to the worldโs problems so that we donโt have to.
โ23.โย Trusted News Initiativeย
Link:ย www.bbc.com/beyondfakenews/trusted-news-initiative
Institution:ย Trusted News Initiative
Type:ย Trusted News Initiative is aย partnershipย โfounded by the BBCโ that includes media and technology organizations from around the world, including Google and YouTube, Microsoft, Facebook, Twitter, The CBC, The Washington Post, AP, Thomson Reuters, the Information Futures Lab/First Draft, and several more. Its members collaborate โto build audience trust and to find solutions to tackle challenges of disinformation.โ
You may have read about them when:ย The Trusted News Initiative established an โearly warning system of rapid alerts to combat the spread of disinformationโ during the 2020 election. According toย Variety, TNI partners would alert each other to disinformation that threatened the โintegrity of the election so that content can be reviewed promptly by platforms.โ
RFK Jr and a host of other plaintiffsย have brought legal actionย against The Trusted News Initiative and many of its members, accusing them of suppressing information and debate on Covid-19.
What we know about funding:ย There are few details about its funding or the level of resources contributed by its members, beyond obviously the relationship to the BBC. We do know itsย expansionย to an Asia-Pacific network was โfunded by the Google News Initiative.โ
What they do/What they are selling:ย Real-time combating of disinformation relating to issues such as elections and Covid-19.
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โWeโll doย everythingย we can, working together, to stop disinformation about Coronavirus in its tracks.โ
Gibberish verbiage:ย Information Apocalypse. The Covid-19 pandemic brought about the โlong-prophesied Information Apocalypse.โ For the journalists covering disinformation: โDonโt face the Information Apocalypse alone.โ
Twitter Files Reference:ย Claire Wardle in May 2019 mentions โBBC Media Action who were in the roomย told us about this ridiculous database they have. It lists the sources of information people trust around the world localized by country, region and sector of the population (farmers, teachers, etc).โ
Closely connected to:ย Big tech and big media, and anti-disinformation groups like Information Futures Lab/First Draft.
In sum:ย A mammoth anti-disinformation initiative bringing together the biggest media and tech companies on the planet.
โ24.โย Automated Controversy Detectionย
Link:ย https://www.aucode.io
Type:ย An tech startup focused on โmisinformation and controversyโ emerging out of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. AuCoDe wasย awarded a $1 million National Science Foundationย grant in November 2020 to tackle โdisinformationโ using artificial intelligence. They are a core partner on Meedanโs NSF-fundedย Fact Champย initiative to โincrease collaboration between fact-checkers, academics, and community leaders to counter misinformation online.โ
You may have read about them when:ย AuCoDe take it to the next level, leaving countering misinformation in their wake and showing just how close the โanti-disinformationโ industry is to the cultural zeitgeist. AuCoDe is concerned that โideas are being spread uncontrollably online.โ Luckily they have a โdetection algorithmโ that can โtell whatโs important and potentially opinion-shiftingย beforeย things become viralโ making โcommunication more productive and less dangerous.โ In this way they create a โnew standard for nuanced community discussions.โ In addition, they do โtoxicity monitoringโ and have a product called โDetoxify,โ to help you โavoid unwanted content that triggers you.โย No misinformation, all narrative control โ but done under the anti-misinformation banner. Founder Shiri Dori-Hacohen has now moved to the University of Connecticutโsย Reducing Information Ecosystem Threats (RIET) Lab. The mission creep continues.
What we know about funding:ย The National Science Foundation has provided almost all publicly reported funding
What they do/What they are selling:ย AI based technology services for surveilling online conversations
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โAvoid unwanted content that triggers youโ
Connected to:ย Meedan, the Reducing Information Ecosystem Threats (RIET) Lab, Annenberg Public Policy Center/Factcheck.org, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, the School of Communication and Information at Rutgers University-New Brunswick
In sum:ย Automated Controversy Detection takes anti-misinformation mission creep to the next level with its open and explicit AI-driven approach to surveilling โcontent that triggers you.โ
โ25.โย Center for Countering Digital Hate
Link:ย https://counterhate.com/
Type:ย An NGO cut-out engaged in brazen smearing, attacking of dissenting views, deplatforming, censoring and pro-active shrinkage of the Overton window.
You may have read about them when:ย They issued a report called the โDisinformation Dozenโ which sought to โdeplatformโ dissident Covid thinkers from Substack, including RFK Jr, smearing them as โanti-vaxxers.โ CCHD are experts in strategically conflating serious voices with the fringes, mixing them together to isolate genuine actors and squash dissent. What is unique about CCHD is its blatant distortions, vicious tone, and cynical appropriation of anti-racist, anti-sexist, and public health rhetoric. The group promotes explicitly pro-censorship and deplatforming positions, and pushes the boundaries of the new normal. Founder Imran Ahmed is connected to senior UK Labor Party figures.ย Current campaign workย focuses on pressuring advertisers to leave Twitter due to Musk making it a โsafe haven for hate and intolerance.โ
What we know about funding:ย CCHD doesnโt declare its funding on its site, thoughย filingsย show its UK registration (they are also US-registered) received almost ยฃ1m GBP in 2022.
What they do/What they are selling:ย Aggressive targeting of โmisinformationโ particularly on Covid but also related to climate, including campaigns with strong access to media outlets.
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โWho are the anti-vaxx Substack millionaires?โ โScience matters. Lies can kill.โ โCCDH has forced social media companies to establish precedent and remove hateful or dangerous content, by holding them directly accountable for amplifying and profiting from it.โโ โCampaigns such as Stop Funding Misinformation reduce the reach of websites that masquerade as real news but in fact spread conspiracy theories, lies and hateful propaganda.โ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย 12 Attorneys General write to Twitter and Facebook on March 24, 2021, asking them to take action on the โdisinformation dozen,โ referencing the Center for Countering Digital Hate. They state: โAs safe and effective vaccines become available, the end of this pandemic is in sight.โ On April 1, days later, Twitter adds labels and gives strikes to all the accounts, and permanently suspends one person.
In sum:ย Institutional anger-merchant NGO with a murky background and bulldog mentality ready to attack all and sundry, to institute their regime of censorship.
โ26.โย Craig Newmark Philanthropiesย
Link:ย https://craignewmarkphilanthropies.org/
Type:ย A large philanthropy founded by the inventor of Craigslist, with a special focus on journalism and disinformation.
You may have read about them when:ย Along with Omidyar and the Knight Foundation, Craig Newmark is perhaps the most prolific private funder of projects combating โdisinformation.โ He provided foundational grants to a wide range of institutes including the Stanford Internet Observatory, Columbia Universityโs Craig Newmark Center for Journalism Ethics and Security, the Institute for Rebooting Social Media at Harvard University, Poynterโs Craig Newmark Center for Ethics and Leadership, and The Markup.
He also provided funding to the soon to be dismantled Technology and Social Change Project at Harvardโs Shorenstein Center. Newmark is the โanti-disinformationโ elite of the elite. Here he is, below (back row, 7th from left) at the Aspen Instituteโs Information Disorder Commission, a $3.5 million project he funded, along with Prince Harry, Alex Stamos (SIO), Kate Starbird (University of Washington), Katie Couric, Chris Krebs (Director, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, DHS), and several others.ย Full list of commissioners.
He sits on almost 40 boards, as well as many organizations he funds, including Harvardโs Shorenstein Center, Columbia Journalism Review, CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, Poynter, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, New America Foundation, Politifact and others.
What we know about funding:ย According to Philanthropy.com Newmark gave away USD $419m between 2018-2022, a huge portion of it to โanti-disinformationโ initiatives. The list is enormous but includes Virality Project partners the Stanford Internet Observatory, University of Washington Center for an Informed Public, the Center for Social Media and Politics at NYU, and the National Conference on Citizenship, as well as First Draft,ย Politifact, Poynter, Pro Publica,ย Mother Jonesย and Harvardโs Shorenstein Center. In 2022ย he announced a $50 million grant to the Aspen Instituteย to build what he calls a โcyber civil defense.โ
What they do/What they are selling:ย The idea that his money can be a โforce multiplierโ for battling disinformation. Craigslistโs free classified ads helped destroy local newspapers, but Newmark has found friends in journalism with gifts of $10 millionย to the Columbia Journalism Schoolย and $20 million to CUNYโs Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism.
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โYou can manipulate a person by manipulating a personโs feed. You can tell a person what to believe and maybe tell a person what to do.โ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย Newmark is ccโd on regular emails from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace for its monthly โsphere of influenceโ meetings. Other invitees include failed Disinformation Governance Board head Nina Jankowicz, the military-funded Australian Strategic Policy Institute, the Atlantic Council, and scores of others. It is not known if he attended any of the meetings.
Connected to:ย Almost everybody, including, probably, anyone currently in the room with you.
In sum:ย A mega-fund core to power the explosive growth of the Censorship-Industrial complex.
โ27.โย Omidyar Group
Link:ย https://omidyar.com
Type:ย A series of foundations from the founder of eBay providing a huge amount of funding to the Censorship-Industrial complex.
You may have read about them when:ย You heard of almost any โanti-disinformationโ initiative. Omidyar funded projects include the incrediblyย creepy CryptoChat, which peers into private and encrypted messaging systems to weed out misinformation. Omidyar also funded theย Algorithmic Transparency Instituteย which conducts โcivic listeningโ and โautomated collection of dataโ from โclosed messaging appsโ in order to combat โproblematic content.โ Pierre Omidyar himself is perhaps the most famous traitor to the cause of free speech in the โanti-disinformationโ complex, having once stepped in to serve as the protector of Edward Snowdenโs documents. Look back and youโll see articles describing him as a Bruce Wayne-like figure, a reclusive billionaire for whom the Snowden leaks โgave him a cause โ and an enemy.โ
What we know about funding:ย Omidyar gives funds to almost all the leading โanti-disinformationโ initiatives including the Stanford Internet Observatory, the Global Disinformation Index, Full Fact, Meedan, Poynter, the National Conference on Citizenship (NCoC)/Algorithmic Transparency Institute, and University of Washington Center for an Informed Public. Omidyar is also a key funder ofย The Intercept. He was recently hailed for donating $100 million to โboost journalism and fight hate speech,โ although only a portion of that money seems to be going to anti-disinformation efforts. Funding is distributedย under several brandsย including Luminate, the Democracy Fund, and First Look Media.
What they do/What they are selling:ย Funding for progressive causes, ostensibly.
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย From an Omidyar Network report: โBig tech has shown little will to truly stopโฆinfectious and dangerous messages.โ
โHairballโ graph:ย From an Oxford group study funded by the Omidyar Network:
In the #TwitterFiles:ย Twitterโs Nick Pickles reacts to an Omidyar-sponsored report on โjunk newsโ:
In sum:ย Like Newmarkโs group, this is a mega-fund and driving force behind the Censorship-Industrial Complex.
28.โย The Knight Foundation
Link:ย https://knightfoundation.org/
Type:ย The third in the trifecta of private foundations leading the funding of the โanti-disinformationโ industry.
You may have read about them when:ย The Foundation was born from the Knight Ridder company, once the largest publisher of newspapers in the United States. In 2005 it began a major course change toward digital journalism initiatives, and over the past several years made disinformation a major focus. Outgoing CEO Alberto Ibargรผen served on the Council on Foreign Relations and on the boards of ProPublica, American Airlines, and the World Wide Web Foundation, among others. As an indication of the coziness of the Censorship-Industrial Complex, Vivian Schiller (Aspen Institute CEO and participant in Aspenโs Hunter Biden laptop tabletop)ย here co-hosts Knightโs podcast on the 2020 electionย and discusses the problem of misinformation. No mention is made of her work in running a misinformation operation.
In 2018ย Graphika produced a report for the Knight Foundationย on disinformation and Twitter during the 2016 election. The report seeks to link those supporting the journalism of Julian Assange to โanti-immigrant/anti-Muslim themes,โ โconspiracy theoriesโ and โracist and โwhite identityโ accounts.โ
What we know about funding:ย Like Newmark and Omidyar, Knight has given to aย Whoโs Whoย of the CIC, including NewsGuard, the University of Washington Center for an Informed Public, First Draft, the Global Disinformation Index, Poynter and the Algorithmic Transparency Institute.
In 2019ย Knight committed $50 millionย to โ11 American universities and research institutions, including the creation of five new centers of studyโ includingย $5 million to the University of Washingtonโs Center for an Informed Publicย (of EIP and Virality Project infamy).
Total grants in 2021ย were $114 million.
What they do/What they are selling:ย Funding for a range of media initiatives from journalism, to anti-disinformation, as well as arts and culture.
In the #TwitterFiles:ย In October 2018, in a classic demonstration of how CIC groups influence both content moderation and news coverage, theย Washington Postย writes Twitter and cites a Knight Foundation study claiming that 80% of accounts that spread disinformation in 2016 are still on the site. Twitter gets two days to respond to this query, which follows a pattern Twitter by then knew all too well: โStudyย Xย says you havenโt done enough to stopย Y. We publish inย Zย hoursโฆโ
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โWe believe in freedom of expression and in the values expressed in the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.โ
Closely connected to:ย almost all the NGO, think tank, and academic leaders of the โanti-disinformationโ field, as well other major foundations including the Charles Koch Foundation, the Hewlett Foundation, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, and the Omidyar Network.
In sum:ย A leading force in developing the ecosystem of anti-disinformation organizations, particularly in the US.
โ29.โย Google Jigsawย
Link:ย https://jigsaw.google.com/
Type:ย A โthink/do tankโ developing technical solutions to disinformation, censorship, and violent extremism.
You may have read about them when:ย Jigsaw was founded in 2010 as Google Ideas under the leadership of Jared Cohen, who worked both under Condoleezza Rice and Hilary Clinton at the State Department. Cohen was seen as a rising star who could help leverage the geo-political potential of emerging digital technologies. Cohen co-wrote the book โThe New Digital Ageโ with Google CEO Eric Schmidt and pioneered the transformation of Google into a State Department regime change proxy. Cohen is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Cohen stepped down from Jigsaw in mid-2022 to join Goldman Sachs as a Partner and as President of Global Affairs. In Octoberย he traveled to Kyiv to meet with President Zelensky.
New CEO, Yasmin Green, is a member of theย Aspen Instituteโs Cybersecurity Groupย andย Commission on Information Disorder, and on the board of the Anti-Defamation League. She is also a senior advisor on innovation toย Oxford Analytica, a private intelligence firm created by former Nixon staffer David Young. Young co-founded โThe Plumbersโ whose members conducted the 1974 Watergate break-in. (Young did not directly participate).
Jigsaw developed the controversial Redirect Method in partnership with Moonshot. Jigsaw isย training AIย to combat โtoxic,โ โunreasonable,โ โproblematic,โ and other language.
Camille Francois, Graphikaโs current Chief Innovation Officer, was formerly the Principal Researcher at Jigsaw.
What we know about funding:ย Funds come from Google.
What they do/What they are selling:ย Highly sophisticated technology solutions to guide online discourse and selective anti-censorship work in the service of selective official goals.
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โAdvancements in natural language processing and AI as a whole have enabled us to develop products with the goal of making conversations online better at scale.โ
Connected to:ย Moonshot, Atlantic Council/DFRLabs, Graphika, Aspen Institute, the State Department.
In sum:ย Perhaps the slickest and most technically sophisticated of the censorship and speech control initiatives
โ30.โย Full Factย
Link:ย https://fullfact.org/
Type:ย A leading UK โfact-checkingโ โNGOโ with mountains of money from Big Tech.
You may have read about them when:ย Founded by Michael John Samuel, the son of an aristocrat, Full Fact epitomizes the elitism and down-talking of the โfact-checkingโ industry. Full Fact has been explicit about collaborating with Big Tech and government, stating in a #TwitterFiles email โFull Fact has been working with a variety of organizations including Facebook, Google, Twitter, First Draft and the UK and Canadian governments to create a Framework for Information Incidents.โ
In developing the framework they relied on much of the same cozy club of information police โ the report drew from other leading organizations including First Draft, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Ben Nimmo (NATO, Graphika, Facebook), and Joan Donovan (Data & Society, Shorenstein).
While most digital rights and free speech groups have opposed the British governmentโs online โsafetyโ bill, Full Factย thinks it doesnโt go far enough, arguing โthe Bill falls short of the Governmentโs aim to make the UK the safest place to be online.โ
Full Fact was the first UK member ofย Facebookโs Third-Party Fact-Checking program. Characteristic of the โfact-checkers,โ they get an enormous level of Covid information wrong, including claiming it isย โvery rareโ to get Covid twiceย or that you โcanโt be forced to get a vaccine.โ While claiming they are independent they also state they โwork for Facebook.โ Full Factย led a successful campaignย to have vaccine critic and Conservative MP Andrew Bridgen removed from the party.
As is typical, Full Fact strays dramatically from the remit of pursuing the truth, instead combating โbadโ information. (It is not known if that means naughty or of poor quality; possibly, both) It would be one thing if the response was to counter with โgoodโ information, but Full Factโs consistent approach favors censorship-type solutions. Full Fact has even developed its ownย AI-driven Robocop to police speech online.
What we know about funding:ย Full Fact takesย huge amounts of Big Tech money, almost $2.5 million between 2019-2021 from Facebook alone. Another example of corporations funding the people who supposedly keep them accountable. They also receive strong support from Google, Poynter, and Omidyar.
What they do/What they are selling:ย Truth policing in the service of the powerful.
Characteristic/worldview quote:ย โFull Fact fights bad informationโ; โBad information ruins lives.โ
In the #TwitterFiles:ย A note via theย #FakeNewsSciย mailing list shows that they are working with โFacebook, Google, Twitter, First Draft and the UK and Canadian governments to create a Framework for Information Incidents.โ
Connected to: Facebook, Google, Poynter, First Draft, Shorenstein Center, Graphika, and the government of the UK.
In sum:ย Leading candidate for inevitable UK Big Brother award.
HONORABLE MENTIONS:
31:ย Media Matters For Americaย A creature of noted political hitmanย David Brock, MM4A has made an effortless transition from mainstream media promulgator of political scandals like Russiagate to maker of Internet blacklists and counter of social media offenses, an example being theย 927 million interactionsย Donald Trumpโs Facebook posts earned between January 1, 2020 and January 6, 2021.
32.ย Miburo/Digital Threat Analysis Centerย Anti-disinformation lives, even on Substack! After a departure from the Hamilton 68 project, former FBI official Clint Watts landed at a series of agencies, beginning with Miburo, a group whose goal, according to one TwitterFiles email, was to โdetect bad actors in 1 hour and assess them in less than 6 hours through rapid reports, infographics, and case studies.โ As far asย Racketย could tell, this made Miburo the only anti-disinfo group that offered a time-based, drive-thru-type service. Miburo eventually was reborn on Substack as the Digital Threat Analysis Center.
33.ย Credibility Coalitionย An oddly vague group of researchers that has poured resources into trying to develop what it calls a โshared vocabulary for credibility.โ From 30,000 feet, the CC seems to replicate a lot of what outlets like theย Global Disinformation Indexย (see below) do, analyzing media sources and downranking for various qualities ranging from lack of fact-checking to use of โstraw manโ or โslippery slopeโ arguments. Though the group stresses itโs looking to identify content โsignalsโ that โrequire human judgment and training,โ the CC has worked with the media literacy platform Public Editor out of Berkeley to tout a โcollaborative softwareโ called โTextThresherโ that looks suspiciously like a tool for computerized credibility analysis. The CC has also produced something like anย inverse version of this list, creating a page where users can surf color-coded maps of groups that have aimed to โimprove information quality.โ
34.ย Factcheck.me/Botcheck.meย Created by two ambitious whippersnappers from the Cal-Berkeley,ย Rohan Phadte and Ash Bhatย โ who onceย self-describedย as having gone from โa couple students hacking on an extended school project into an eight-person team with the mission of protecting the publicโ โ Factcheck.me and Botcheck.me offer user-friendly tools for defending against disinformation and bots, respectively. The Democratic National Committee in 2020 hired the pair to write a report โon the spread of disinformation on social media,โ as theย New York Timesย put it. Internally, the Twitter Files show the company saw their reporter-friendly tools detecting โbot-likeโ activities as cousins of the infamous Hamilton 68 project, with one executive writing to a comms official handling a press inquiry about the service: โEvery one of the accounts they use as an example of a bot account on theirย methodology page on Mediumย is wrong. Doesnโt publish data, does sell consultancy. Definition of monetizing the problem.โ Told about the emails, Ro Bhat said, โWowโฆ We reached out to those guys several times and never heard back.โ
35.ย Duke Reportersโ Labย The DRLโs tools are perfect examples of what we atย Racketย have termed โRFWs,โ or โreporter-friendly widgets.โ Funded by the usual suspects at the Newmark Foundation, the Knight Foundation, and Facebook, the Lab experiments with tools like MediaReview and ClaimReview, essentially tagging projects that allow fact-checking organizations to submit their reports of false claims or imagery to search engines and tech platforms for swifter ranking. An โexperimental platformโ called Squash offers โlive, automated fact-checking during political events like debates and speeches,โย using AIย to โspotโ subjects for human review. The product has already been deployed for political debates:
As with nearly all the CIC-developed tools, the DRL products seek to identify โconsistent terminologyโ or an application that โstandardizes fact-checking content in a machine-readable way.โ This quest for a single fact-checking language is supported by Jigsaw, Facebook, Google, and theย Washington Post. A recent Duke study purporting to show which parts of the country are sadly bereft of advanced fact-checking efforts may remind you of another color-coded state map:
36.ย Revealย This EU-funded โsocial media verificationโ site is, like many European anti-disinformation projects, more overtly terrifying in its dystopian aims than some of its American counterparts. This government-funded program offers a tool it calls without embarrassment the Journalist Decision Support System, or โJDDS.โ Reporting is described as a government-supported team effort: โUp to 19 journalists can use JDSS simultaneously, each interactively browsing 10,000โs of posts in real-time,โ and โanalytics are automatically run on all posts, including sentiment analysis, fake and eyewitness media labeling and newsworthy claim extraction.โ Say that loud and proud, folks:ย newsworthy claim extraction.ย Theย EU funding awardย for Reveal essentially describes an effort to automate what old-school reporters might have called the assignment desk, as the โkey problemโ with news is that โit takes a lot of effort to distinguish useful information from the โnoise.โโ Reveal claims to help by developing tools to โautomatically judge the quality and accuracy of content.โ The display portal for the JDDS looks like an interactive war game, which is probably not an accident.
37.ย Global Disinformation Indexย The GDI should probably be higher on this list. It was the subject of one of the first true investigative features about the Censorship-Industrial Complex, aย series by theย Washington Examinerย that focused on two key facts: the Britain-based GDI received at least $315,000 from the State Department Entity, the GEC, and engaged in โriskโ scoring of news media organizations that down-ranked conservative outlets like the โAmerican Spectator, Newsmax, theย Federalist, theย American Conservative,ย One America News, theย Blaze,ย theย Daily Wire,ย RealClearPolitics, Reason, and theย New York Post.โ As is the case with the Omidyar-funded Oxford Internet Institute and the aforementioned Credibility Coalition, the GDIโs credibility/risk/trust scoring isย built atop a series of subjective variables, among them the use of โtargeting languageโ that โdemeans or belittles people or organizations,โ or includes โhyperbolic,โ โemotional,โ and โalarmistโ language. The GDI announces openly that its strategy is to push major digital marketing clients to โredirect their online ad spending.โ It should be noted that two of the organizations deemed least trustworthy by the GDI are theย New York Post,ย whose story about the Hunter Biden laptop was wrongly censoredย (โGDIโs study did not review specific high-profile stories,โ a reportย quips) andย Reasonย magazine, one of the few prominent press critics of organized censorship. Now-defunctย Buzzfeed, whose editorial shipwreck will forever bear signs of hull rippage from its decision to publish a Steele dossier it knew was riddled with errors, was on GDIโs top ten safest sites list, lauded for โ get this โ โjournalistic best practicesโ andย โneutral, unemotional language.โ
39.ย ย Institute for Strategic Dialogueย Alsoย fundedย by the U.S. State Department, the Britain-based ISD offers another smorgasbord of content-suffocation tools,ย including a โhate-mapperโ service and a product calledย Beam, which โis a multi-lingual, multi-platform capability developed to expose, track and confront information threats online.โ ISD identifies โbad actorsโ or โextremist actorsโ and its โshared endeavourโ program seeks to build โpsychosocial resilience to radicalization.โ The ISD is responsible for theย report saying anti-Semitic remarks soaredย on Twitter after Elon Muskโs purchase of the platform, a report listing โindependent journalistsโ amplifying โRussian propagandaโ that inspiredย an NBC reportย including the now-on-trial Gonzalo Lira. ISD was also a source for aย USA Todayย reportย that was influential in getting not-yet-convicted people accused of participation in the January 6th protests removed from a variety of Internet services. The ISD is one of many groups that were roaring about the dangers of Discord before the โPentagon Leakerโ story, saying, โEvidence suggested that users of extreme right channels on Discord are very young,โ raising questions about the role that โonline gamesโ play in โradicalization of minors.โ
40.ย Wikipediaย In June of 2021, Wikipediaโs then Executive Director Katherine Maher appeared at a conference hosted by the Atlantic Council, where she wasย interviewedย by NBC reporter Brandy Zadrozny about โhow big tech can be as trusted as Wikipedia.โ The thrust of the report was that Wikipedia had refused a request by the Turkish government to take down โtwo pages that they did not appreciate references to President Erdogan and his family and their involvement in the Syrian civil war as a state sponsor of terrorism,โ which led to a ban of the site that wasย overturned to great fanfareย in 2020. Wikipedia, like many tech behemoths, plays the role of a defender of free speech in certain circumstances, but lately it has become perhaps the most furious grindstone of digital conformity in Western media outside Twitter, Google, and Facebook, institutionalizing a system of blockages that increasingly only let through information reported on in an approving way by large corporate or academic institutions (it has been a greatย struggleย to get Twitter Files material on the site, for instance). Wikipedia was once seen as one of the great experiments in open-source media, and identified with legal challenges to things like the NSAโs illegal domestic surveillance program, but has become just another member of the cartel-like โindustry callโ that includes the FBI, Twitter, and Facebook (the Twitter Files show the exact moment in which Wikipedia asks for a โdisinformationโ contact at the FBI), and has taken rigid stands on ridiculous issues likeย the definition of โrecession.โ
#TwitterFiles also show Wikipedia staffย invited to election tabletops with the Pentagon, andย joining weekly โindustry meetingsโย with their Big Tech brethren.
Former Executive Director Katherine Maher is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a World Economic Forum young global leader, a security fellow at the Truman National Security Project, and a fellow at DFRLabs at the Atlantic Council, the military-industrial complexโs favorite Think Tank. Itโs amazing how far selling encyclopedias can take you.
41.ย EU Disinfo Labย Another anti-disinformation site that is full of features warning of the insufficiently vibrant stream of warnings about Russian aggression, climate change, and unregulated Internet spaces like Telegram. Despite being an independent non-profit, the Lab proxies for government, keenly assessing โthe commitments of platform signatories of the EU Code of Practice on Disinformation.โ It also seeks to weed out an โanti-system mindset,โ such as the use of cryptocurrencies to fund โjunk sitesโ seeking to cultivate a โfringe and non-conformist image.โ The Lab represents the uptight tattle-tale wing of the โanti-disinformationโ scene.
The EU Disinfo Lab made perhaps its biggest splash in 2019 when it claimed to have unearthed โ265 Coordinated Fake Local Media Sites Serving Indian Interests.โ The illustration features skull-and-crossbones icons for โzombieโ sites and alien faces for โnewโ ones:
42.ย The UK 77th Brigadeย It should tell the reader something that the formation of an active military unit by a key NATO partner which is openly devoted to fighting online โdisinformationโ and has been crediblyย accused of mass surveillance of its own citizenryย is just the 42nd entry on our list. The UKโs 77th Brigade would be rejected by any good fiction editor as too over-the-top.ย Big Brother Watch broke the storyย revealing how the speech of MPs, academics, journalists, human rights campaigners and the public was monitored under the guise of combating โmisinformation.โ
43.ย Claim Busterย Another machine learning tool backed by the Knight Foundation, the National Science Foundation, Newmark Philanthropies and the Facebook Journalism Project thatโs working on a key problem for any future AI-driven moderation program: how to use machine learning to identify โclaimsโ in real-time.ย โAutomated live fact-checking for everyoneโ is easy, according to its graphics: just follow the instructions below.
44.ย DisinfoCloudย This was a GEC-funded operation, through the beginning of 2023. It featured a โcontinuously updated news feedโ of disinfo-related items, often with fairly far-out recommendations to the โnearly 300 organizations, including those that provide machine learning analysis of social media, media monitoring, fact-checking, media literacy, social network mapping, and moreโ in the organizationโs โtestbed.โ This blogged material was available to โselect government, civil society, and private sector users,โ of which, fortunately for #TwitterFiles readers, Twitter was one. The company received wisdom-nuggets like the idea that the terms โcolor revolutionโ and โRussophobiaโ were โPro-Kremlinโ propaganda, the good news that Britainโs GHCQ might soon be using AI to combat disinformation, and much more. Not intended for your eyes, you had the honor of paying for it all, if youโre an American citizen.
45.ย MythDetectorย The fact-checking arm of the Media Development Foundation, funded by USAID and the German Marshall Fund, helps produce valuable public service messages, like a video in Georgian explaining that the so-called American doctor online whoโll cure Covid and obviate the need for masksย is actually a porn star. MythDetector is a Facebook third-party fact checker, โcompliantโ with Poynterโs International Fact Checking Network principles, and will โmeasure the truth!โ for you.
46.ย Verifiedย The inevitable creep-tastic United Nations fact-checking initiative promises to โdeliver life-saving information on Covid-19 and stories from the best of humanity.โ Key insights? โBehavioral science research told us we needed to increase peopleโs risk perception, the feeling that there is a threat to themselves or their loved ones.โ The technocrats at Verified were sure COVID-19 vaccines would โend the pandemicโ by โstopping the spread of COVID-19.โ Verified partnered with the World Bank, Al Jazeera, Facebook, Omidiyar, First Draft, Ikea, Spotify, Tik Tok, Twitter, and #ThisIsOurShot (also a Virality Project partner). It was built in collaboration withย Purpose, a McKinsey-for-millennials whose co-founder chaired the WEFโs Global Agenda Council on Civic Participation.
47.ย Foreign Malign Influence Centerย After the public relations fiasco of the Orwellian Disinformation Governance Board that was to be housed in the Department of Homeland Security, and the erasure of the โMisinformation, Disinformation, and Malinformationโ Subcommitteeย that appeared slated to assume the DGBโs functions, it appears the federal government is putting chips on another Truth-Ministry facsimile, moving them perhaps to this existing agency under the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. The FMIC was โactivatedโ on September 23, 2022. The DGB closed August 24, 2022. The FMIC is headed by Jeffrey K. Wichman, who spent 30 years at the CIA.
48.ย Advance Democracy Inc. Not much is known about this group except that it appears as a source for a lot ofย USA Todayย stories (about Tucker Carlsonโs January 6th reports, climate denialism, and โTrump alliesโ still on Twitter) and appeared in a strange TwitterFiles exchange, in which a comms official describes them as mysterious and the author of some โshakyโ reports. As is typical of many CIC cutouts, its website lists no information regarding leadership, staff or donors. It does that at the same time as โtracking political donationsโ of others.
49.ย DisinfoWatchย Who says Canadians canโt be sketchy? This group, whichย listsย as โresearch partnersโ GEC, NATOโsย STRATCOM Center of Excellence, and the Center for European Policy Analysis, is the usual mish-mash of evil Putin portraits and gibberish text about building โresilienceโ to threat narratives, but also offers skillful local knowledge in finding ways to blame RT for using coverage of the Canadian trucker protests to โlegitimize anti-government narratives.โ
50.ย Countering Disinformationย Another USAID-funded group that promotes โinformation integrityโ and argues for a โwhole-of-society approach,โ which they say will require creating a โsense of urgencyโ in the population about disinformation. (In anti-disinformation literature, the public is often depicted as insufficiently panicked). The group promotes a โmixed-methods approach,โ which includes โfact-checking, monitoring, and other interventions.โ It also offers a keen visual representation of what a โhealthy information spaceโ looks like: complete encirclement by protective institutions. Like freedom, in order words, only the opposite!