Anonymous ID: ad4e3a Feb. 21, 2019, 5:25 p.m. No.5314870   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5055 >>5092

https://www.iwr.ai/voterfraud/index.html#top

 

Top 200 Twitter profiles that pose a sever threat to the deep state and voter fraud.

 

Projection at its finest.

 

I won’t be doxxing myself much to say I am in this list. It is total disinformation intended to silence truth.

 

WE ARE THE NEWS NOW! AND THEY WANT US SILENCED!

 

WWG1WGA

 

“Who Are They?

 

The 200 accounts shown above are a sample of a network on Twitter talking about Voter Fraud and amplifying false and/or misleading narratives about election integrity and the democratic process. We discovered that this group of 200 accounts either generated or were mentioned in over 140 million tweets over the last year. As you will see below, this network is not only growing at an accelerating rate but also coordinating with effective tactics that appear to bypass many of the detection methods of existing disinformation research.

 

As you read through the rest of this story and the subsequent report, you'll probably be left with more questions than answers. We certainly are. You might even be in awe of these networks. We can relate to that too. Some days the size, scale, and effectiveness of these modern tactics to influence conversation have fueled our curiosity. On other days, however, we're left angry, sad, and frustrated at the content these accounts push, and how we’ve all helped create an environment that allows people to weaponize participation and wield influence over civic dialogue so effectively.

 

We are a volunteer team of researchers, technologists, and artists that started this project to explore the conversation about Voter Fraud in US politics on Twitter. We became interested in this topic because it sits at the intersection of the VoterID and Voter Suppression conversation, and while instances of Voter Fraud are statistically infrequent it is the subject of considerable debate online. We wanted to know if there was a consistent conversation happening, was it happening on Twitter, and was there something behind the charged nature of the dialogue that we should be concerned about. Here is what we're not gonna say:

 

We’re not concluding that all these accounts are bots

We're not concluding that these accounts are Russian or originating from one source

We’re not concluding that all of these accounts are intentionally involved in an influence operation

We are also not claiming that there have been no documented cases of Voter Fraud. We are wondering if the reality warrants the intensity and urgency of stories that we see, or if the narratives about Voter Fraud are in fact undermining the Democratic ideals they claim to be protecting. In a brief titled Debunking the Voter Fraud Myth the Brennan center used phrases like "vanishingly rare" and "nearly non-existent" to describe the results of research looking at documented cases of Voter Fraud on US elections. If that research is thorough and accurate, then along with other research we've seen on this issue it was clear that many of the narratives related to Voter Fraud seem to at the very least be overreactions, and at worst some kind of propaganda, demagogic messaging, and/or a strategy to distract people from real issues related to election integrity.

 

Our hope is that by presenting our work in this format, we can discuss what influence looks like, and investigate the roles we all play and the way coordination is being used against all of us online, right now. While we don't know who these people are or why they're doing this, we do know that they're effective, influential, and coordinated in some way.

 

We want to know more.

 

Ok, What Happened?

 

  1. Tracking #VoterFraud

 

This investigation began when we found something strange. When we looked for use of the hashtag #VoterFraud on Twitter over the last twelve months, we saw this:

 

Usage of #VoterFraud hashtag in 2018”