BJP leads the way in internet trolling, propaganda

Almost 20% of Indian Twitter traffic on some trending issues is generated by BJP IT cell: researcher

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KARACHI:
A month after a suicide car bombing in Indian Occupied Kashmir sparked tensions between Pakistan and India, an internal assessment of the government concluded that the threat of further escalation in tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbours was over.

However, keyboard warriors on both sides of the border continue to work overtime in a bid to defame and humiliate the other country and its citizens. This digital confrontation, played out primarily on social networking website Twitter, has attracted the attention of policymakers and security think tanks in recent years.

With elections in India just around the corner, some international conflict experts believe that a whole 'army' of trolls and fake users deployed by the South Asian rivals, currently involved in spreading fake news on social media, could also be used for political purposes.

As such, some analysts have decided to take matters in their own hands and carried out a brief analysis of Twitter activity in India, based on monitoring select hashtags and tweets that went viral on the internet in a very short time.

One user, identified as Elliot Anderson on Twitter, captured 105929 tweets with the hashtags #SurfExcel, #BoycottSurfExcel and #BoycottHindustanUnilever for two days. The trends highlighted by the user provide for interesting reading. A tweet that Anderson posted a day before revealing his results is provided below.



Spreading propaganda

Earlier this week, a Surf Excel ad promoting Hindu-Muslim unity was met with massive backlash in India and, in apparent confusion, led to Microsoft Excel getting bashed on social media.

The advertisement showed a girl giving her Muslim friend a ride on her bike to a mosque to pray on the occasion of a Hindu festival. The video was condemned as anti-Hindu and nationalists slammed it on every platform. On Twitter, a campaign was started against the brand.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zq7mN8oi8ds

According to Anderson, when the campaign started to spread online, at least 170 tweets per minute (8300 tweets per hour) were being registered.



Some images were shared more than others and pointed to suspicious activity. Four of these are shared below. An image of Microsoft Excel also features on the most shared list.



Users used certain hashtags as part of the drive to accelerate the campaign against Surf Excel. These included #surfexcel, #boycottsurfexcel and #boycotthindustanunilever, among others.



Some users who tweeted using these hashtags had location enabled while most others did not. More than half of the users tweeting these hashtags had location disabled.



Of the ones that did have their location enabled, some interesting trends were visible. Most users tweeted from urban centres like New Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru. Rural areas do not feature on this list.



According to Anderson, the most active users who tweeted using these hashtags were as follows. More research on these fellows and their background is certainly required.



Most of these active accounts belonged to the ruling Bhartiya Janata Party in India, and a cursory glance at their timelines confirms that they are spreading propaganda on the behalf of the party.



The accounts and their activity was also posted by Anderson. This activity seems limited to their involvement in the campaign against Surf Excel.




One profile analysed by Anderson threw up some bizarre connections to fake news. Pictures used by a user for Twitter is also being used by other accounts on Facebook.



In the larger interest of things, the tweets by these malicious users represent only a fraction of the total Tweet volume in India around these hashtags, according to Anderson.



Of all the accounts that used these hashtags, only some belonged to BJP community, while the rest was organic traffic. An exact percentage was also provided.

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But their tweets take a larger chunk of the total activity, raising suspicions about their possible scale of operations and their impact on social media.



Not only the BJP, but the Indian National Congress is also involved in digital propaganda efforts. They also have an information technology cell focused on spreading fake news.



These accounts and their activity was also monitored and posted for all to see by Anderson. A comparison to the BJP digital strategy was also made by Anderson.



One of these users had especially suspicious activity. The user joined Twitter only a few months ago but had already posted an abnormal number of tweets.



But INC is less powerful than BJP, show numbers that Anderson has posted on Twitter. At least in terms of digital propaganda efforts just before the Indian elections.



Almost 20% of total tweet volume revolving around these hashtags was generated by IT wings of Indian political parties.



Political consequences

The campaign against Surf Excel after the controversial advertisement was aired primarily wanted to target the digital application of the brand, but since it did not have one, the trolls deployed by BJP fell to attacking tech giant Microsoft and its software Microsoft Excel instead, suggested reports.

With elections around the corner, these misinformation campaigns could significantly alter the course of the results in the largest democracy in the world. According to a report by Digital Civility Index, 64 per cent of Indians surveyed encountered fake news last year compared to the global average of 57 per cent.

Such hoaxes can also have dangerous consequences for a country where over 40 people were killed last year due to rumours spread across messaging application WhatsApp. The report further claimed that there had also has been a sharp increase in family and friends spreading false information.

The term 'fake news' went mainstream during the 2016 US presidential campaign when hundreds of websites and social media accounts published false or biased stories. Technology giants, later on, announced that they were working to fight the spread of false news on their platforms through a combination of technology and human reviews.

Fake accounts can be major distributors of harmful and misleading content, and social website Facebook claims to have removed nearly six million such accounts globally in the first quarter of 2018. Meanwhile,  research carried out by western publications shows that a rising tide of nationalism in India is driving ordinary citizens to spread fake news.

The research found that facts were less important to some than the emotional desire to bolster national identity. Social media analysis shows that right-wing networks are much more calibrated than on the left which had pushed nationalistic fake stories even more. There is also some overlap of fake news sources on social media and support networks of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
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