A Penny For My Thoughts: How The Right Uses Paid Commenters to Manipulate Public Opinion And Trash Free Speech

By Mark Esposito, Weekend Blogger

Fascinating book out by NPR media reporter, David Folkenflik, entitled Murdoch’s World: The Last of the Old Media Empires that explores the strange world of publisher Rupert Murdoch. Gobbler of such English-speaking newspapers as The News of The World, The Sun, The Wall Street Journal, and The Times, Murdoch is mostly known for his media collaboration with Roger Ailes in the development and promotion of Fox News, the Right’s mouthpiece of choice. Until his inglorious dismount from credibility in the London Phone Hacking scandal where a Murdoch newspaper employee was convicted of hacking the telephone voice mails of murdered British teenager, Milly Dowler, Murdoch had personified all that is unseemly about tabloid journalism. The personification of Charles Foster Kane, Murdoch fed the Right the red meat of dissention blending news with opinion and relying on practices that were criticized by honest journalists (even conservative ones) around the world calling it right-leaning tabloidism (here).

His right-wing pabulum had the desired effect when a media study by researchers at the University of Maryland found that regular Fox News viewers were more misinformed about American politics than viewers of any other channel. (here). Fox News immediately responded with this “substantive” reply about the merits of the study:

“The latest Princeton Review ranked the University of Maryland among the top schools for having ‘Students Who Study The Least’ and being the ‘Best Party School’ – given these fine academic distinctions, we’ll regard the study with the same level of veracity it was ‘researched’ with.”

As the Huffington Post notes, “For the record, the Princeton Review says the University of Maryland ranks among the ‘Best Northeastern Colleges,” Stelter notes. “It was No. 19 on the Review’s list of ‘Best Party Schools.” (here). Misinformation,it seems, extends beyond the viewership and all the way up to the executive suites at Fox News.

For his part, the foreign-born Murdoch calmly states his place in American politics as the savior of  the GOP. In an interview with Fortune magazine, Murdoch makes that point (here):

Fortune: “Does it bother you at all, Rupert, that there is a view that Fox News has contributed in a big way to the political discontent in the U.S., degraded the political process, and maybe, in spotlighting the Tea Party, even hurt the Republican Party?”

Murdoch: “It has certainly given voice and hope to people who didn’t like all that liberal championing thrown at them on CNN. I think it has absolutely saved it. It has certainly given voice and hope to people who didn’t like all that liberal championing thrown at them on CNN. “

Voice, indeed, as in Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity and the myriad of right-wing pundits who keep up a very public drumbeat of Republican position points. Nothing much new there but the fascinating part of Folkenflick’s book is not the public manipulation of stories and ideas but instead the shadow war being waged on fair-minded internet blogs and their like-minded commenters by the paid flacks from Fox News and other Right-wing organizations. Folkenflik  says shills in Fox’s online PR staff maintained between twenty and a hundred fake profiles on each social media account. The fake commenters then used the accounts to promote right-wing agendas.

And it’s not just the hacks on the payroll at Fox News that get into the act but piece workers are recruited into the slime as well. Freelance writer Randa Morris describes the recruitment process:

I have encountered hundreds of help wanted postings for fake right-wing bloggers, paid commenters and bogus survey takers. Most of the positions pay between five and ten cents a post. The “paid commenters” ads usually appear on international freelancing sites, meaning you do not have to live in the United States to help push the tea party agenda here. (here)

Here’s an example of a Craig’s List ad purporting to seek out paid commenters to hawk right-wing talking points (Right click and Use the “Open Image In New Tab” for a better view):

Could this be fake? In the ether of internet guerilla warfare, everything is dubious but we have to admit the possibly it’s true in view of Folkenflik’s book. The placement in a Canadian Craig’s List  lends some credence to Randa Morris’  proposition that foreign recruiters are alive and well in the blog-o-sphere seeking paid commenters.

Folkenflik details that right-wing commenters are using fake profiles and they are getting paid.  He also notes the shadowy tactics used to hide true identities such as wireless broadband connections to block tracing the comments back to their sources. It’s long been known that so-called reputation management firms garner up to $10,000.00 per month to scrub unflattering (and often true) stories about its clients off the internet. (You can read a great exposition of this in the New York Magazine here). It’s no long stretch to conclude that what can be taken away can just as easily be injected into the dialog.

Folkenflik explains that the paid commenters don’t just stick to Fox News blogs but spread out through the internet to spew the talking points and drive off real commenters. The tactics are vicious personal attacks with the goal of stifling liberal or moderate points of view. The attacks usually come in packs and are both immediate and bullying. And since many liberal to moderate voices are well-educated folks with little desire for direct verbal confrontation, the tactics work:

 “They respond to normal people in the comments sections of any number of web-sites, often with aggressive and insulting attacks.Gawker reports that its site is one of many that has been targeted by Fox’s paid commenters, otherwise known as social media trolls. According to Gawker, Folkenflik said that when he was at Fox “even blogs with minor followings were reviewed to ensure no claim went unchecked. The point of these fake commenters is not just to push a specific agenda. It’s also to deceive the unsuspecting public about the actual amount of support that exists for that agenda. Paid commenters use vicious attacks against anyone who posts an opposing opinion. Eventually the attacks have the effect of driving people with opposite views away from the targeted sites. This allows them to dominate the web with their fake profiles, while at the same time discouraging real people from participating in the discussion.” (here)

Armed with this info how do we spot a paid troll versus an ideologue? Here’s my checklist:

1. Immediate response to contrary views.

2. Huge volume of comments.

3. Provocative personal attacks.

4. Gloating over driving people away from the blog.

5. Fawning deference to the blog host to ensure continued ability to post.

6. False professions of fair mindedness as shown over time.

7. Ganging up with other trolls to intimidate.

8. Avoiding the merits of a piece to attack the author or supporter.

9. Similar postings across the web on other sites

10. Stalking opposing commenters to obtain personal information and revealing that information.

 

You think ISIS is a direct threat to our democracy? Look closer to home.

 

Sourced Throughout

~Mark Esposito, Weekend Blogger

Kudos to Gene Howington for educating me on the perils and politics of propaganda with his contributions on this blog and sparking my interest.

By the way and for better or worse, the views expressed in this posting are the author’s alone and not necessarily those of the blog, the host, or other weekend bloggers. As an open forum, weekend bloggers post independently without pre-approval or review. Content and any displays of art are solely the author’s decision and responsibility. No infringement of intellectual property rights is intended and will be remedied upon notice from the owner. Fair use is however asserted for such inclusions of quotes, excerpts, photos, art, and the like.

 

 

316 thoughts on “A Penny For My Thoughts: How The Right Uses Paid Commenters to Manipulate Public Opinion And Trash Free Speech”

  1. Come on, the poor guy is in Seattle. You want to be going door-to-door in Seattle?

  2. Penelope Dreadful
    Max-1
    Have you ever considered becoming a Jehovah’s Witness?
    = = =
    Dig away…

  3. I’ll just say this:
    It is truly sad that the day and age has come where many people have been propagandized to believe that science is rubbish and dismissible and that Corporate paid shills can control the message instead of real, hard science. Now, Americans welcome idiotic “debates” about factual evidence meant to brainwash the viewer into thinking facts are something made up and that the remaining 3% is worth listening to, and who are to be heard over the mountain of evidence. It’s a day and age where science classes get cut in favor of football or basketball. It’s a day and age where funding is cut in favor war abroad. Sad… but we’re here.

    CREST AD:
    “4 out of 5 dentists say brushing reduces cavities.”
    So, FOXNews(R) airs that one dentist on every segment on basic human hygiene. Yes, that day is NOW! So, brush or not to brush?

    1. Max-1 – I do not always agree with you but I generally respect your opinion. However, Michael Mann is a deal-breaker. He is a man without conscience and ethics.
      Arizona sells power to California and they are getting water from the Colorado, after that CA is on its own.

  4. Max-1

    Have you ever considered becoming a Jehovah’s Witness? It is a whole lot less work handing out those tracts than the amount of work you are doing here trying to convert people. Or perhaps an Amway Distributor? With your devotion, you could earn a pink cadillac or whatever it is they hand out, in no time.

  5. Paul C. Schulte
    Max-1 – not sure where you are but we have had rain since then. And we should have a wet winter.
    I’m in Seattle.

    1. Max-1 – well you had a bad night last night. 😉 My beloved Sun Devils beat a poorly designed stadium, wind, weather, an inability to hear signals and beat Udub at their own home. We control the PAC-12 South right now (may end this weekend as we play Utah)

      I am in the Valley of the Sun

  6. Sorry, it’s a medical abbreviation, “within normal limits.” Read too many medical records, working defending docs.

  7. Switching media hype/ignore theme ~ PERSPECTIVES
    More Americans have married Newt Gingrich than have died from Ebola.

    That joke was originally one about Kim Kardashian, and still applies, too!

  8. Penelope, They do nail the mindset and nothing could ruin that flick. “I sail, I sail, well.. the boat did most the work.”

  9. Mike Appleton,
    K. Hayhoe’s comment: “it’s our faith, that informs our choices”
    Now, faith is more than a belief in God. Faith can also represent who and what we trust and are willing to listen to.

  10. Finding optimism about climate change
    http://www.cbc.ca/the180/excerpts/2014/10/24/finding-optimism-about-climate-change/

    Katharine Hayhoe may seem like a contradiction: the Canadian climate scientist is also an evangelical Christian living in Texas. The combination of faith and science make for a unique outlook on the world, but also an optimistic one.

    Hayhoe says we’ll deal with climate change more effectively if we look at it from a perspective of values, not science.

    “Science can tell us if the climate is changing, and the answer is yes, it is…but science can’t tell us what to do. That choice is up to us, and it’s our values, and for many of us, it’s our faith, that informs our choices.”
    Katharine Hayhoe

    (continue for recorded interview)

  11. Nick
    You promised to ignore me…
    = = =
    Seeing some fanaticism here already, aren’t we. Or is this manic commenting wnl to you? I guess so.
    = = =

Comments are closed.