Regulations war: How does the Russian trawler factory work?
- May 23, 2022
- 0
Virtual case of Shishimarin The screenshot is a typical example. Google featured an article from the Wiki (first link on the left) that a Russian soldier on trial
Virtual case of Shishimarin The screenshot is a typical example. Google featured an article from the Wiki (first link on the left) that a Russian soldier on trial
The screenshot is a typical example. Google featured an article from the Wiki (first link on the left) that a Russian soldier on trial for murder in Kiev is actually Ukrainian.
Ukrainian resources are blocked by submitting complaints on social networks (second link on the left).
Russia renounces war criminal Shishimarin / Screenshot
The wiki community edited this information, stating that the Russian military is on trial (link at right). But it didn’t last long.
Kremlin trolls will try to get the attacker’s narrative back to Wikipedia. And anyone who falls for this narrative will be convinced that Ukraine is to blame, not Russia.
Every Kremlin troll from dozens of fake accounts distributes thousands of comments and links to the war version of the Kremlin every day.
Bots are asking millions of researchers about this lie. Search engines index the trolls’ comments and links and bring the narrator’s narratives to the top.
Such troll groups work in all major languages.
They promote Kremlin comments by citing their own posts on Wikipedia, media and social networks. It was crushed by hundreds of fake accounts. They sow irritation and try to achieve their goal by saying black and white and white black.
Source: 24 Tv
John Wilkes is a seasoned journalist and author at Div Bracket. He specializes in covering trending news across a wide range of topics, from politics to entertainment and everything in between.