The Government Heavily Manipulates Social Media

http://georgewashington2.blogspot.com/2009/01/government-heavily-manipulates-social.html

The U.S. government long ago announced its intention to "fight the net".

As revealed by an official Pentagon report signed by Rumsfeld called "Information Operations Roadmap":

The roadmap [contains an] acknowledgement that information put out as part of the military's psychological operations, or Psyops, is finding its way onto the computer and television screens of ordinary Americans.

"Information intended for foreign audiences, including public diplomacy and Psyops, is increasingly consumed by our domestic audience," it reads.

"Psyops messages will often be replayed by the news media for much larger audiences, including the American public," it goes on.***

"Strategy should be based on the premise that the Department [of Defense] will 'fight the net' as it would an enemy weapons system".

CENTCOM announced in 2008 that a team of employees would be "[engaging] bloggers who are posting inaccurate or untrue information, as well as bloggers who are posting incomplete information."

The Air Force is now also engaging bloggers. Indeed, an Air Force spokesman said:

"We obviously have many more concerns regarding cyberspace than a typical Social Media user," Capt. Faggard says. "I am concerned with how insurgents or potential enemies can use Social Media to their advantage. It's our role to provide a clear and accurate, completely truthful and transparent picture for any audience."

In other words, the government is targeting "social media", including popular user-ranked news sites.

Indeed, the Pentagon publicly announced years ago that it was considering using "black propaganda" - in other words, knowing lies.

In addition, when you look at what the Israeli lobby has done with Megaphone software to automatically vote stories questioning Israel down and to send pro-Israel letters to politicians and media (see this, this, this and this), you can start to see how the U.S. military - an even larger and better-funded organization - could substantially influence voting on social news sites with very little effort.

Moreover,the military has outsourced many projects to private contractors. For example, in Iraq, much of the fighting has been outsourced to Blackwater. And governmental intelligence functions have largely been outsourced to private companies.

It is therefore not impossible that the government is hiring cheap labor to downvote stories on the social media sites which question the government, and to postpro-government comments.

Finally, under the post-9/11 "homeland security" laws, the government almost certainl routinely demands full access to ISPs and websites. In other words, we've all seen polls at Digg, Reddit, YouTube, and mainstream news sites suddenly disappear entirely if a sufficiently pro-government sentiment was not expressed.

Do you doubt that the military and homeland security apparatus would step in to take control of what it considered an "enemy" message? And remember, the government considers any message questioning anything the government does as an enemy message. See this, this, this and this.

He he.

He said "Capt. Faggard."

Keep up the good work GW.

70 Disturbing Facts About 9/11

John Doraemi publishes Crimes of the State Blog
http://crimesofthestate.blogspot.com/

johndoraemi --at-- yahoo.com.

Thanks for posting this topic

Not only have you addressed a problem, but you have diagnosed what is causing it. I know when I put up stuff on Reddit, it looks like I have 1 or 2 or 0 even, but when I log in, I find out I have many more votes up. This is always happening to me. It could be a good issue to approach congresspeople on, and it might even be the subject of a lawsuit, since for some people, lower ratings translate into loss of funds. Of course there are free speech issues too.

One example of my own.

For a long time, I thought the story NEW YORK CITY BALLOT INITIATIVE COULD BRING 9-11 UNDER RENEWED SCRUTINY was just my average dud as far as reddit was concerned, although I did know that it garnered 61 comments. Recently, however, I discovered that I could check reddit for the negative comments by going into the comment section. I then began to check all of my stories. Generally I had just been looking at the vote total. So I found that negative votes were adjusted generally so that the vote total did not climb above 1 or 2. I then checked back to earlier stories. When I checked the "ballot initiativ"e story, this is what I found:

submitted on 04 Jun 2008
points 12
up votes 398
down votes 386

So what I originally thought was a story that garnered only 12 votes on Reddit turned out to be the most popular story I ever submitted. My sense is that even this story continues to be monitored, so if it is read and voted up, a balancing of down votes accompanies them.

Thanks again, GW. Definitely actionable information.

Peter