• DarkThoughts
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    1341 year ago

    I always wonder if Russia would collapse, if suddenly a lot of the disinfo & hate on various online media would become noticeably quieter.

    • cassetti
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      1 year ago

      That partially already happened at the start of the war. There was a massive “brain drain” among the higher educated part of society, which did include a bunch of hackers. Why live inside russia these days when you can move elsewhere and get paid better?

    • AFK BRB Chocolate
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      561 year ago

      As I recall there was a period a couple years back where Russia was cut off from the greater internet and a lot of interesting things got quieter, including r/conservative on Reddit.

    • there’s also iran, I wouldn’t be surprised if north korea and china also have bot farms, and then even in america evangelical christians fund shady hate operations around the world too

      • @jcit878@lemmy.world
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        141 year ago

        its well known china has an enormous online presence set around spreading misinformation, and of course the worlds best ‘whataboutisms’ you are ever likely to see

        • @CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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          31 year ago

          You can see them all over the lemmy.ml worldnews community talking about how Ukranians dying needlessly isn’t anybody else’s concern and any aid to them will immediately mean nuclear annihilation of the entire world.

    • @gmtom@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      We actually did see this at the start of the war. When Russia was dealing with the new sanction and shifting focus from the west to Ukraine.

      • prole
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        131 year ago

        communist propaganda

        It’s like you know that these are words, and they’re words that you’ve seen people put together in the past, but you have no idea what they mean.

        Where is anyone talking about communism? Where is the propaganda? What the fuck are you even talking about??

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Where is anyone talking about communism?

          Lemmygrad.ml, I assume? I dunno if it’s “propaganda,” though, mainly because I haven’t really seen much from that instance. It isn’t defederated or anything; it just apparently isn’t popular enough to show up in Active/Hot/Top.

          • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            I see a lot of communism good/capitalism bad meme content in lemmy.ml in general. Now I’m really not against communism and I absolutely see the negative effects of western society’s brand of unregulated late stage capitalism, but political meme content in general is just entirely devoid of all nuance to the point where people are seriously dropping silly statements like “capitalism is the sole contributor to climate change”, as if if you could turn off capitalism climate change would just stop lol. It’s straight up propaganda.

            • @Stovetop@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              That and conveniently ignoring any negatives involving China/Russia.

              There are a few users on Lemmy.ml who I see all over the place. Half their posts will just be funny “lol capitalism sucks, amirite?” memes and the other half will be “Look at how China is ushering the world into a golden age of social and economic progress” or “When will the west acknowledge Ukraine’s Nazi problem?”

              • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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                31 year ago

                Agreed, seems like “capitalism” has become analogous with “greed”, which I mean, they sort of go hand in hand, but that doesn’t mean greed doesn’t exist without capitalism.

                • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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                  41 year ago

                  I think people also conflate social democracy with socialism, and/or communism.

                  And communism with Stalins dictatorship (and Xi etc etc).

                  The ideas behind the ideologies are all interesting but only democracy have proven “not horribly killing a large part of the population and a large part of the neighbour population” like all the time

                  So for me anyways, it’s full democracy, then tack on socialism (for example).

                  I think the discussion about democracy is also largely non present, I mean how fun is it if other people just decide what they want and you can like object every X Years?

                  We got democracy 0.1 let’s move forward!

                • takeda
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                  21 year ago

                  it’s kind of like how USSR/Russia was seen bad because of communism, and now since 1991 they are not communist so they are the good guys.

                  It is the same freaking country, they just embraced fascism over communism in the last 3 decades.

            • @kklusz@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              Is there a way to keep the Lemmy homepage set to my subscriptions rather than the default for the instance? I have to manually change it to the subscribed tab every time I open Lemmy

              • Scew
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                11 year ago

                Alternatively, if you like it to be set to your subscriptions and sorted by ‘Hot’ just set those settings up and then create a bookmark and it will always take you back to the page with current content and your selected settings.

          • prole
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            11 year ago

            Yes, I understand how lemmy works… I meant in these comments specifically. Otherwise the comment was a complete non-sequitor.

            • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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              01 year ago

              Huh? The comment I replied to is about disinfo and hate in online media, Lemmy is online media. I was making a joke about the content I see regularly, and clearly it landed perfectly.

        • @CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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          11 year ago

          People are confusing pro-china and pro-russia users as “pro-communists” even though they don’t ever mention communism and only comment things that benefit the dictators running these two governments.

          • @Lenins2ndCat@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            It’s a nonsensical question, there are no communists that regularly get called a tankie who consider Russia communist. The tiny handful of instances of children that do not know better really don’t count.

  • SpicyPeaSoup
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    1251 year ago

    Russia has the last laugh since they confiscated 3 copies of The Sims 3.

        • @Localhorst86@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          recollecting from memory: Early in the war, russian news reported they busted a nazi hideout in the occupied donbass region. The report was accompanied by a picture of swastika flags, nazi tshirts, 3 copies of the “Sims 3” game and a document signed with “Illegible”. All layed out neatly on a bed.

          Apparently, the instructions for staging the photo was to include Nazi paraphenalia, 3 SIM Cards and a document with an illegible signature. And someone didn’t read the instructions properly (or took them too literal), and instead used 3 copies of Sims 3, as well as a document signed with the name “illegible”

          • @jcit878@lemmy.world
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            61 year ago

            that is one of the more hilarious things ive heard out of this whole conflict of russia continually embarressing itself

      • @UllallullooA
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        161 year ago

        I agree that there’s nothing wrong with being any ethnicity (although that’s a creepy way to say it), however the Russian public does have extremely high support for Putin’s actions: https://www.statista.com/statistics/896181/putin-approval-rating-russia/

        Notice the huge jump in approval when he invaded Ukraine. Only FDR, Truman, Kennedy, and the Bushes have ever gotten that high of approval in the US.

        • ansik
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          1 year ago

          And Americans voted Trump.

          I’m not trying to whataboutism here, my point is that even an actual democracy people are fooled by the (political)elite. We can’t blame the Russian people for living in a dictatorship and for (foolishly) trusting / listening to their media, I think. Still open to be convinced otherwise.

          • @fubo@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            As you imply, it’s possible for someone to come into power by winning elections, and then become a dictator by breaking the democratic process, ending free & fair elections, criminalizing opposition parties, destroying independent judiciary so that dictatorial actions cannot be reviewed in court, etc.

            There are plenty of examples of this in today’s international fascist movement.

    • @grue@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      As the saying goes, there are two fundamentally difficult things about programming:

      1. cache coherence
      2. coming up with good names for things
      3. off-by-one errors

      Negative comment counts are likely caused by the latter.

    • candyman337
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      21 year ago

      If a user deletes a comment it subtracts from the count, seems to go to negative numbers sometimes, maybe when it’s removed it subtracts two on certain circumstances

  • ferret
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    261 year ago

    why are these are being set up in Ukraine and not Russia? What do they gain from having them within reach of the Ukrainian police?

    • I Cast Fist
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      471 year ago

      My guess is that it’d make it look like it were actual ukrainians spreading the disinfo, as the IP wouldn’t show russian addresses. Could also be that Ukraine is blocking internet traffic from Russia, so being there is a way to bypass the block.

      I fully expect the assholes behind said farms to be safely within russian territory, so they’re just sighing and shrugging as having to set up a new base.

        • @mea_rah@lemmy.world
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          51 year ago

          Depends what you mean by “faking”. You can fake Ukrainian IP by using some VPN service, but then you’re using VPN IP which is quite obvious. If you want many genuinely residential IPs, you could use some botnet and infected computers in Ukraine. This is more authentic and harder to filter out. But some services actually require phone number and at least capability to receive texts to verify the number, some use the number as user account. (Telegram and such) Then you need actual SIM cards (not to be confused with Sims 3, the game 😉) and you need to connect to local cell tower. (perhaps you could do roaming, but that would be quite obvious long term) Now to fake all that, you’d need at least some devices operated in Ukraine and at that stage it’s probably easier to find some people willing to do this locally for money or because they are high on russian propaganda themselves.

          • Do you need to connect to actual celltowers tho? I know legit SIMs are a kind of a barrier, but then…

            Using a portal through KZ to an UA endpoint via VPN\proxy, faking geoloc and other identifying stuff on your device.

            For me, it sounds like enough, and a collaborant is only holding an exit node that is easier to defend in court than having all infrastructure at their place.

            • @mea_rah@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              Well you do if you want to receive the confirmation text. And while you’re at it, you might as well use the same cell tower for data so that you get “residential” IP.

              You can definitely fake geolocation and perhaps you could fake IP through some proxy, but you can’t use commercial VPN services as their IPs are well known VPN IP ranges at this stage. (these SIMs might have been used as such proxies for some spamming besides being used for this specific botnet) Effectively the more you want to blend in with the actual Ukrainian end user traffic, the more you need to be present in the country and the more complicated it is to fake it otherwise. Especially if you’re trying to hide from state level investigation, that has access to triangulation from cell towers, providers logs, etc…

              • It’s just I see one collab having a gateway on their PC for russian-based labs to operare rather than the whole scheme based oin Ukraine.

                Cell-tower data would be hepfull to locate the guy, but do web\apps collect it?

                • @mea_rah@lemmy.world
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                  21 year ago

                  You can do the gateway on a PC thing. You don’t even need to have collaborator to do that, plenty of people run outdated systems riddled with malware.

                  But once you need actual working SIM (Telegram, Watsapp, etc…) you really need that SIM somewhere in Ukraine. And you need plenty of them. (see the pictures in the article, there’s a ton) At minimum to activate the accounts and more realistically for occasional re-verification. (2fa) Sure you can then run actual bots in russia, but that need for physical presence is still there at least occasionally. The article mentions 100 individuals, when you consider that 150k SIMs were there, most of the operation indeed was in russia or somewhere else.

                  The triangulation is just a way to maybe correlate multiple SIMs in the same spot by Ukrainian officials once they had enough suspected malicious SIMs. (So that they know it’s not just few random persons with malware on their phone, but it’s indeed huge concentration of SIMs in one spot)

      • DarkThoughts
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        31 year ago

        Couldn’t they set up a VPN / Proxy in Ukraine and have the actual bot farm run from within Russia.

        • @DumbleSnore@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          If they did that it would be pretty easy to spot for anyone looking, all the bot accounts would be connecting through the same IP address(es). For it to be believable, you would need thousands of Ukrainian IP addresses, owned by Ukrainian internet providers. What Russia did is an effective way to achieve this. With thousands of sim cards on multiple Ukrainian mobile networks, the traffic is very hard to distinguish from real Ukrainian internet traffic. Of course the downside is that all the devices with those sim cards have to be in Ukraine for it to work. It’s also possible that at least some of these devices were essentially just acting as VPNs for more devices in Russia.

    • @iddqd@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Sim farms can be found in most countries. Granted this is a big one.

      Russia would be a less than ideal choice for criminals right now due to the sanctions affecting routes and prices between Russia and Europe.

  • @Thann@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    be interesting to see how much the usership of lemmygrad drops lol

    (and the rest of lemmy)

      • @SomeSphinx@lemmy.world
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        81 year ago

        From what I gather here in the comments, they use the sim cards to make the bots look like they’re actually posting from where the farm is located, since using a VPN would not be sufficient to hide their tracks.

  • @Lenins2ndCat@lemmy.world
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    131 year ago

    I’d be interested in seeing exactly what messages this farm was putting out. Lists of accounts and what networks they primarily operated on would also be very interesting.

  • @nostalgicgamerz@lemmy.world
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    101 year ago

    I saw on yahoo about pringles being in Belarus a comment about how Pringles was killing “Nazzis” in Ukraine. Makes we wonder if that shit was from Russia

    • @dangblingus@lemmy.world
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      201 year ago

      Everyone is well aware of the Azov brigade. They are at most, 2200 soldiers, and do not represent Ukraine on the whole.

      • @Lenins2ndCat@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        and do not represent Ukraine on the whole.

        74% of Ukrainians view the leader of the WW2 Ukrainian fascists (the OUN) Stepan Bandera favourably. And 81% view the OUN positively.

        • The support for the recognition of the OUN-UPA as the participants of the struggle for the national independence of Ukraine has significantly increased: 81% support it, and only 10% are against. This support has increased 4 times since 2010, and doubled since 2015.

        • Bohdan Khmelnytsky and Mykhailo Hrushevsky are Ukrainian historical figures who are unequivocally positively perceived by Ukrainian society (by more than 90% of the respondents). Over the recent years, there has been a positive trend in the attitude towards Ukrainian historical figures, around which heated debates were going on in Ukrainian society decades ago. In particular, the attitudes that gradually improved are the ones towards Ivan Mazepa (44% in 2012 and 76% in 2022), Simon Petliura (26% in 2012 and 49% in 2022) and Stepan Bandera (22% in 2012 and 74% in 2022). It is important that the positive attitude towards the ideologue of Ukrainian nationalism prevails today in the south-eastern regions of Ukraine, and among those who speak only Russian in everyday life.

        Source: One of the largest Ukrainian polling institutes

        The OUN carried out pogroms, mass executions of jews and were regarded by even the nazi SS as disgustingly brutal.

        https://www.dw.com/en/stepan-bandera-ukrainian-hero-or-nazi-collaborator/a-61842720

      • @Lenins2ndCat@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They are at most, 2200 soldiers

        It’s weird how they’re on every front of ukraine, in front of the cameras everywhere, and also in western ukraine simultaneously. Amazing how so few people can be everywhere at once and always in front of the cameras instead of literally anyone that isn’t a nazi.

      • @Raphael@lemmy.world
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        -51 year ago

        There are many pictures of non-Azov combatants with Nazi symbols.

        But at least you acknowledge Azov are nazis, that’s a step up from the rest.

        • takeda
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          21 year ago

          LOL, I mean you have Stalin in your profile picture.

      • @Raphael@lemmy.world
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        -111 year ago

        The following countries were invaded by Nazis:

        Austria
        Belgium
        Czechoslovakia (modern Czech Republic and Slovakia)
        Denmark
        Estonia
        France
        Greece
        Guernsey (U.K. Channel Island)
        Hungary
        Italy
        Jersey (U.K. Channel Island)
        Latvia
        Lithuania
        Luxembourg
        Monaco
        Netherlands
        Norway
        Poland
        Russia (partial occupation)
        San Marino
        Ukraine
        Yugoslavia (modern Albania, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia)
        
        • Flying SquidM
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          111 year ago

          Okay, which ones of them were members of the Azov Battallion? Because this is about them.

            • Flying SquidM
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              81 year ago

              Pretty sure they aren’t, or Azov would be the ones doing the invading. You seem to not care that a sovereign country was invaded by a larger force.

              • @mea_rah@lemmy.world
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                81 year ago

                You’re discussing with someone that is part of the botnet mentioned in the article. Just look at their history. Just report as off-topic and move on. No point talking to propaganda mouthpiece.

              • @Oderus@lemmy.world
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                21 year ago

                Dude is a fucking moron. The more we all report his comments and block him, the better Lemmy will be.

                • Flying SquidM
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                  1 year ago

                  Do you think Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was justified because of Azov? Does that justify all the civilians being killed? Are they all complicit? Is the only way to solve the problem annexing the country to Russia? Is the fact that Russia also has Neo Nazis in their ranks not relevant?

    • Ahri Boy
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      11 year ago

      Azov is clearing their dark past. It’s not fully Nazi anymore. Ukraine needs to clear remaining Nazi symbols within the government to improve the international image. The real enemy of Russians is the Kremlin, not Ukraine.