Tag: Kenyans On Twitter

  • Twitter Ban Accounts As New Research Reveals How Elites Used Influencers To Spread Propaganda On Pandora Papers

    Twitter Ban Accounts As New Research Reveals How Elites Used Influencers To Spread Propaganda On Pandora Papers

    On 3rd October 2021, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) published the Pandora Papers, a massive investigation into how several public figures use offshore tax havens to hide assets worth billions of dollars. Almost immediately, the story provoked a sharp reaction from the Kenyan public. This is because the family of Kenya’s outgoing president, Uhuru Kenyatta, was among those whose offshore financial engagements were exposed.

    Kenya has indeed had a long history of political families stashing massive amounts of money abroad. This news, however, came at an especially charged time. Political tensions in Kenya are at a high as the country nears the 2022 elections. The Pandora Papers also showed up at a time when the country’s political scene was fresh from a heated debate on wealth declaration — one ignited by the government’s public revelation of the wealth belonging to the neo-opposition leader, Kenyatta’s deputy, William Ruto.

    For many Kenyans, the Pandora Papers were the perfect summation of Uhuru Kenyatta’s regime: One that has been plagued by corruption scandals, soaring inequality, debt and skyrocketing commodity prices. Therefore, through social media, they let their frustrations be known loud and clear. Very quickly, the hashtag, #Pandorapapers, went trending on Twitter’s Kenyan ecosystem and remained a topic of conversation for the entirety of that week. However, peculiarly absent from the conversation within the first 48 hours of the Pandora revelations, was coverage from local media outlets in Kenya.

    While the rest of the world and Kenyans dissected the implications of ICIJ’s revelations, Kenya’s mainstream media outlets were peculiarly silent. The silence didn’t go unnoticed. Alongside #Pandorapapers going trending, the term “Githeri Media” also surfaced on Twitter’s trending section. Kenyans started calling out the media demanding that they cover this issue.

    The temporary absence of critical mainstream media coverage of the Pandora Papers created an information vacuum that became fertile ground for a disinformation campaign aiming to pacify the scandal following the leaks.With the government and the president under pressure, due to soaring online outrage, a counternarrative operation was mounted and found a strong ally in Twitter.

    Twitter’s trending algorithm amplified these campaigns to millions of Kenyans who were using the platform to find information about the leaks and engage in discussions about them. As a result, a distorted perspective began to gain momentum one where Kenyans appeared outraged not by the Pandora Paper’s damning findings, but by their implication that Uhuru Kenyatta is guilty of wrongdoing.

    As Kenya’s outgoing President Uhuru Kenyatta faces blowback from the bombshell Pandora Papers, online disinformation campaigns are attempting to exonerate the leader, according to new research by two Mozilla Fellows.

    The investigation by Odanga Madung and Brian Obilo reveals that Kenya’s flourishing disinformation industry has once again sprung into action, with well-paid disinformation influencers and sophisticated tactics successfully manipulating Twitter’s trending algorithm.

    Meanwhile, Twitter is doing little to curb the spread of this disinformation. The report is titled “How to Manipulate Twitter and Influence People: Propaganda and the Pandora Papers in Kenya.”

    READ THE REPORT

    Madung and Obilo carried out the research over a four-week period. They spoke with multiple disinformation influencers in Kenya, who receive regular payments and detailed instructions about when and what to tweet from shadowy employers. Madung and Obilo also used data from Twitter’s Firehose to comb through over 10,000 tweets and 2,000 accounts that behaved inauthentically.

    This latest report builds on the pair’s previous research, titled “Inside the Shadowy World of Disinformation for Hire in Kenya” and published in September. In both cases, Madung and Obilo amassed a trove of evidence, from sockpuppet accounts, to counterfeit memes, to WhatsApp exchanges with disinformation influencers.

    Says Odanga Madung, lead author of the report: “When the Pandora Papers were first released, Kenyan Twitter users were outraged that their president was implicated. But like clockwork, an alternative sentiment quickly emerged, supporting the president and his offshore accounts. Some of the tweets promoting this alternative sentiment included outright lies. But other tweets were more nuanced: technically true, but clearly inauthentic and coordinated to feign public support. In short: Kenyan Twitter was awash in Pandora Paper astroturfing.”

    Says Brian Obilo: “This report is about Pandora Paper disinformation in Kenya, but also the larger issues at play. It is further evidence of the scale and influence of Kenya’s flourishing disinformation industry. And it is further evidence of how Twitter is unwilling — or unable — to address this problem.”

    Odanga Madung is a Mozilla Fellow and data journalist based in Nairobi, Kenya and is the lead author of the report. Brian Obilo is a Mozilla Fellow and cybersecurity analyst based in Nairobi, Kenya.

    Highlights of the investigation include:

    • Astroturfing was the tactic of choice. The Pandora Paper disinformation campaigns used astroturfing to game Twitter’s trending algorithm. They flooded the platform with manufactured tweets, ultimately getting two hashtags in support of President Uhuru Kenyatta (#phonyleaks and #offshoreaccountfacts) to trend. But there was ample evidence of their illegitimacy: Several of the participating accounts tweeted nothing but political hashtags for days. The accounts involved also repetitively used the same set of media assets in their tweets, or repeated specific phrases. And accounts mimicking celebrities were used heavily in classic bait and switch fashion.
    • Outright lies were also deployed.Completely fabricated content was also sprinkled in with the astroturf content. For example, Reginald Kadzutu, an economist with Amana Capital, had his likeness used in several tweets to make it appear as if he had done an interview for the BBC supporting President Uhuru Kenyatta. The image attributes a quote about the legalities of offshore accounts to him. But Kadzutu and the BBC confirmed that no such interview had happened. The image is fake, but it remains published on Twitter.
    • Kenya’s disinformation industry continues to flourish. Kenya’s shadowy and sophisticated network of fake accounts, artificial hashtags, and well-paid disinformation influencers continues to grow and mature. Some of the disinformation influencers interviewed said that they’ve been in this business for over six years and have never been caught. There are Whatsapp groups that serve as disinformation-for-hire marketplaces. And one interviewee explained: “I know a guy who started doing this business when he was very broke and now the guy even got married, bought himself a car and his cheeks are very round. There’s money in this thing.”
    • Twitter remains negligent. Although some of these Pandora Paper campaigns unfolded on Facebook, the majority occurred on Twitter, and two of the hashtags were promoted by Twitter’s own trending feature. As one disinformation influencer said, “Twitter is easy [to manipulate].”
  • Fellow Research: Inside the Shadowy World of Disinformation-for-hire in Kenya

    Fellow Research: Inside the Shadowy World of Disinformation-for-hire in Kenya

    New research by two Mozilla Fellows reveals how malicious, coordinated, and inauthentic attacks on Twitter are undermining Kenyan civil society
    Meanwhile, Twitter is doing little to curb this behavior, and good-faith activists are having a hard time on the platform

    UPDATE: After an internal investigation, Twitter took action on over 100 accounts operating in the country which it found had engaged in violations of its platform manipulation and spam policy.

    New research by Mozilla Fellows Odanga Madung and Brian Obilo reveals that Kenyan journalists, judges, and other members of civil society are facing coordinated disinformation campaigns on Twitter — and that Twitter is doing very little to stop it.

    READ THE REPORT

    Madung and Obilo conducted the research over the course of two months using tools like Sprinklr, Twint, and Trendinalia. The pair also interviewed influencers who participated in the disinformation campaigns, and collected a vast trove of screenshots, memes, and other evidence. In total, the research uncovered at least 11 different disinformation campaigns consisting of more than 23,000 tweets and 3,700 participating accounts.

    Says Odanga Madung: “This research provides a window into the booming and shadowy industry of Twitter influencers for political hire in Kenya. This industry’s main goal is to sway public opinion during elections and protests, especially with regard to Kenya’s ongoing constitutional review process, the Building Bridges Initiative.”

    Says Brian Obilo: “Amid this chaos, Twitter is doing very little. The platform allows malicious actors to run sock puppet accounts, create malicious content, generate fake engagement, and ultimately hijack Twitter’s very own trending algorithm. As a result, millions of Kenyans are being manipulated on Twitter.”

    This research provides a window into the booming and shadowy industry of Twitter influencers for political hire in Kenya.

    ODANGA MADUNG, MOZILLA FELLOW

    Odanga Madung is a Mozilla fellow, journalist, and data scientist based in Nairobi, Kenya. Brian Obilo is a Mozilla Fellow and cybersecurity analyst based in Nairobi, Kenya.

    Twitter’s negligence in Kenya and other African countries more broadly is especially brazen given CEO Jack Dorsey’s public “commitments” to the African tech industry. Previously, Dorsey announced plans to relocate to Ghana (which he scaled back citing coronavirus concerns); encouraged cryptocurrency adoption on the continent; and even told reporters that there is a “huge opportunity especially for young people [in Africa] to join Twitter and for us to learn to best serve them.”


    Highlights of the investigation include:
    • Disinformation campaigns are a lucrative business. One interviewee revealed that disinformation influencers are paid roughly between $10 and $15 USD to participate in three campaigns per day. Payments are made directly to the influencers through the mobile money platform MPESA.

    • Twitter’s trending algorithm is amplifying these campaigns, and Twitter is placing ads amid all this misinformation. Eight of the 11 campaigns examined reached the trending section of Twitter. The campaigners we spoke to told us that this is their number one target, as it affords them the amplification they seek.

    • These campaigns run like a well-oiled machine. One of the influencers who researchers spoke to explained a complex system of using Whatsapp groups to coordinate and synchronize tweets and messaging. Anonymous organizers use these groups to send influencers cash, content, and detailed instructions.

    • These campaigns are increasingly targeting individuals. No longer focusing on just broad issues and events, disinformation campaigns are increasingly identifying and targeting individuals, like members of the Linda Katiba movement and the Kenyan judiciary. This work is also beginning to border on incitement and advocacy of hatred, which is against Kenyan Law.

    • Verified accounts are complicit. One influencer we spoke to claimed that the people who own coveted “blue check” accounts will often rent them out for disinformation campaigns. These verified accounts can improve the campaign’s chances of trending. Says one interviewee: “The owner of the account usually receives a cut of the campaign loot.” The researchers managed to review screenshots from one of their sources confirming the availability of the accounts for rent from another influencer.

      The researchers however did try to reach out to the blue check accounts they identified in the campaigns to verify if indeed these claims were true. All of them denied that their accounts were rented. Reiterating that they were publishing content with the hashtags in their own capacity.

    • These campaigns are chilling good-faith activism and making the platform harder to use for activists. Good-faith activists are now self-censoring on Twitter. One activist said she significantly reduced her Twitter activity thanks to all the trolling she experienced: “What was once a place where one could have some semblance of a healthy discussion on topics has now been completely poisoned.” Another activist mentioned that she had to spend a significant amount of effort countering narratives that were being seeded by disinformation campaigns.
  • In Kenya, Influencers Are Hired to Spread Disinformation

    In Kenya, Influencers Are Hired to Spread Disinformation

    On May 18 of this year, the insidious hashtag #AnarchistJudges appeared on Kenyan Twitter timelines. Apparently driven by a number of faceless bots, and retweeted by a series of sock puppet accounts, the deluge of tweets cast suspicion on both the competence and integrity of senior High Court of Kenya judges that had just shot down the Constitutional Amendments Bill of 2021. Many falsely claimed the judges were involved in narcotics dealings, bribery, and political partisanship. It quickly became one of the country’s top trending topics.

    Such malicious, coordinated disinformation attacks are rapidly growing in Kenya, my Mozilla Foundation colleague Brian Obilo and I have found in a new investigation. Through a series of interviews with influencers involved in these campaigns, we reviewed evidence of a booming, shadowy industry of social media influencers for political hire in Kenya. Members of civil society and journalists alike have increasingly come under disinformation attacks that seek to silence them, muddy their reputations, and stifle their reach.

    Twitter, which strongly influences the country’s news cycle and has exploitable features like its trending algorithm, has been central to these operations. Many of the accounts and individuals involved promote causes and political ideologies without disclosing that they are part of paid campaigns. Even some verified accounts are complicit.

    With the aid of Twint, Sprinklr, and Trendinalia, we trailed two months of data (May 1 to June 30) of disinformation attacks by mapping and analyzing specific hashtags that the perpetrators used on Twitter. In particular, we focused on Kenya’s Constitutional Amendment Bill, famously known as the Building Bridges Initiative (BBI), debates over which were roiling at the time. The criteria involved mapping certain accounts that posted malicious content targeted at Kenyan activists and judicial officers. Timestamps within the metadata of these tweets suggested strong synchronization: sharp bursts of activity in a very short period of time.

    In total, we flagged 23,606 tweets and retweets released by 3,742 accounts under the 11 hashtags. The campaigns we took an interest in directly attacked citizens and prominent civil society activists who were vocally opposed to it. They also sought to discredit civil society organizations and activists by portraying them as villains who were being funded by Kenya’s deputy president, William Ruto, who had been vocally against.

    The well-coordinated attacks are directed through WhatsApp groups to avoid detection. In groups whose conversations were shared with us, administrators gave instructions about what to post, the hashtags to use, which tweets to engage with, who to target, and how to synchronize posts so that they trend. “The main goal is to go trending on Twitter,” said one influencer, who requested to remain anonymous for fear of retribution. “I’m not sure what our jobs would look like without that target.”

    There is money to be made. Our sources said that they get paid between $10 and $15 to participate in three campaigns per day. Others are on a retainer that can go as high as $250 a month. This is in a country where many citizens earn $1 a day.

    The three most frequent types of victims of these campaigns, our analysis found, were Kenyan journalists, judges, and activists. Many of the attacks against Jerotich Seii, a prominent member of the anti-BBB Linda Katiba campaign, for example, used her or her father’s likeness, pretending to be them and allege that her efforts were being funded by William Ruto. She told us that the attacks against her were so defamatory and effective she “had to spend a good chunk of my time defending my position as someone who is actually a patriot who does what they do out of love for their country.” Other activists have resorted to self-censorship.

    In response to our investigation, Twitter removed over 100 accounts in Kenya that had violated its platform manipulation and spam policies. In an emailed statement, a Twitter spokesperson wrote, “Some accounts relied on inauthentic behavior to attempt to gain followers or retweets (not solely on political themes, from what we observed); but many of the tweets associated with hashtags cited in the report (e.g. #AnarchistJudges) were legitimate.”

    The Kenyan High Court struck down the BBI on May 14, and the Court of Appeal upheld the ruling on August 20, on the grounds that the initiative was unconstitutional. The ruling not only strained the already bad relationship between Kenya’s judiciary and its executive, it also led to waves of disinformation attacks seeking to question their judicial independence and the accuracy of their decision.

    Since the upheld ruling, these attacks have noticeably changed in their visual style. They’ve increasingly employed the look of newspaper editorial-cartoon caricatures and memes preferred by American right-wing Twitter, with repetition of particular templates using the images of the judges. This likely indicated a change of strategy at the top that sought to make the content more palatable and shareable.

    Based on the data we gathered from the Twitter trend aggregator Trendinalia, eight of the 11 hashtags we identified gained enough amplification to become trending topics in Kenya. This was achieved in part through verified users, whom, according to our sources, operatives pay to rent their accounts to improve the campaign’s chances of trending.

    The demand for this service by the political class in Kenya is strong. Within May and June alone we counted at least 31 trending artificial political hashtags—meaning Kenyans had to deal with at least one political disinformation campaign every other day.

    Curiously, there is little evidence that such operations actually sway people’s opinions. But they do affect how Twitter users interact with their information environment. The ultimate goal appears to be to overwhelm users and create an environment where nobody knows what is true or false anymore.

    These problems aren’t unique to Kenya. Throughout Africa—most recently during Uganda’s election earlier this year—political actors are exploiting Twitter features like trends, its engagement mechanics, and account creation to try to control political narratives—crowding the conversation with disinformation and harassing dissenting voices. What can be done?

    For one thing, Twitter’s moderation team could pay much closer attention to its Trending section, country by country, to keep its algorithms from selecting and highlighting content without examining its potential harm.

    The social-media activist organization Sleeping Giants has repeatedly called for Twitter to “untrend” itself, either by removing the trends altogether or by disabling them during critical times such as elections. Arguably, Twitter does have an incentive to fix this. It sells ads for “promoted trends” and “promoted tweets” within the feeds of hashtags on its Trending Topics section to business clients. This puts it squarely in the middle of the mess, as Twitter profits from this harmful activity. The overall message this sends is that it’s OK to sow hate on the platform, so long as its owners can place ads next to the trending content and make a profit from it.

    As Kenya heads toward a contentious election in 2022, the demand for these services will increase. Several political parties and officials will seek out inauthentic coordinated campaigns, many of which will maliciously target individuals and Kenyan institutions. The campaigns we’ve highlighted foreshadow what is to come, and Twitter needs to start paying attention.

  • KOT Goes Berserk After Lawyer Steve Ogolla Claims He Was Conned Sh500K By Woman Parody On Facebook

    KOT Goes Berserk After Lawyer Steve Ogolla Claims He Was Conned Sh500K By Woman Parody On Facebook

    One of the most vocal twitter user and Nairobi-based lawyer Steve Ogolla has been trending for a better part of Sunday—29th Dec— after he alleged a Facebook Woman parody swindled their KSh500,000 wedding funds.

    In a depressing Facebook post, Steve Ogolla narrated how he was financially whacked by a Woman named Dorcas Sarkozy, who he had never met.

    “I was in a fake relationship with this ‘lady’ and she conned me in excess of 500K, planned a fake wedding and nearly drove me to suicide. I reported to authorities but she came back and blackmailed me by sharing my private love WhatsApp chats with her to third parties,” Ogolla wrote.

    Here is randomly samples tweets in response to the Lawyers Facebook post.

    https://twitter.com/Nichonasri1/status/1211297865378742272?s=19

    https://twitter.com/BravinYuri/status/1211242780363767808?s=19

    https://twitter.com/CharleeOddie1/status/1211206509264281602?s=19

    Other Netizens however rubbished the story and termed it as a cheap scheme of using a hoax to gain popularity.

    https://twitter.com/gabrieloguda/status/1211269931830001665?s=19

    Check more tweets here https://twitter.com/hashtag/steveOgolla?s=09

    In his response, the now trending lawyer has said that is past history and nothing from his post is affecting his present life as he’s in Mombasa eating with a big spoon in this festive season.