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The rise of the Twitter spies

  

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Via:  hallux  •  2 years ago  •  5 comments

By:   Pranshu Verma - WaPo

The rise of the Twitter spies
The war in Ukraine has turned ordinary Twitter users into hobbyist intelligence analysts, war sleuths who could impact who’s held accountable for the conflict — or bring danger to those living through it

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T





On most days, Kyle Glen is an ordinary 29-year-old working a clinical research job in Wales. But on March 6, as videos claiming to show the Russian army bombing a civilian escape route surfaced on Telegram, his alternate identity kicked in: Twitter spy.


Some believed the video was faked to smear Russia; others pointed to it as evidence of Russian aggression. Glen’s task: verify if it was real.




In the footage, he found a landmark — an Orthodox church with four golden domes. He located it in Irpin, using Google Maps and a file photograph from the Associated Press to generate its precise coordinates. A scan of Discord, Reddit, and Twitter revealed chatter from witnesses of the bombing. Twelve minutes after spotting the footage, he felt confident the video was real, and   posted the work   on his Twitter account.


“The way wars and conflicts are now, they’re so fast moving, there’s a lot of information. [Things] can get missed,” Glen said. “I think it’s really useful that there are people doing this as a hobby.”



As the Russian invasion of Ukraine has unfolded at a blistering pace over social media, it has swollen the ranks of hobbyist spies such as Glen. Armed with day jobs or coursework, the self-proclaimed open source intelligence — or “OSINT” — community tracks every movement of the Russian and Ukrainian militaries online. Five   weeks into the war, their findings are impacting strategy on the ground.



Mykhailo Fedorov , Ukraine’s minister of digital transformation, said in an interview with The Washington Post that the community’s work is crucial for his country — so much so that a Ukrainian government app, called Diia, now allows citizens to field geotagged pictures and videos of Russian troop movements.

“We’re getting tens of thousands of reports per day,” Fedorov said through a translator. “They’re very, very useful.”


Much of the work could be more impactful in the long term. Activists, scholars and media professionals are using their data to create a verified timeline of conflict that could impact how countries are held accountable for war crimes.



“It’s horrible that one hospital has been bombed,” Benjamin Strick, a digital investigator with the Centre for Information Resilience nonprofit, said in an interview. “But showing a pattern of these attacks is more important in the bigger picture.”



By most accounts, hobbyist tracking started gaining traction in 2011, during the Arab Spring in the Middle East. Smartphone and social media use was on a sharp rise, unleashing unfiltered images of conflict to the general public for the first time in history. This reached a turning point in 2014, when open source intelligence was used to track Russia’s invasion of Crimea, and provide evidence of the country’s involvement in shooting down Malaysian Airlines Flight 17,   research scholars noted . Last year, during the Jan 6. insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, hobbyists   disseminated intelligence online   that federal agencies   relied on   to find rioters.


But Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought an   unusual influx of interested participants, ready to provide the general public with a real-time view of the war, multiple researchers and intelligence hobbyists said.



In recent weeks, established hobbyists have seen their social media followings grow by the thousands. Media outlets such as   The Washington Post   and   the New York Times   have used the community’s work in their visual investigations. Project Owl, a private community for open source intelligence gatherers, has seen its membership base grow from 15,000 members five weeks ago to nearly 30,000 presently, the group’s moderators said.



It’s “utterly explosive,” one of the Project Owl moderators, who spoke to The Post on the condition of anonymity citing security reasons, said in an interview.

The boom comes due to a confluence of forces, experts noted. Ukrainians are primed to share content about the war over social media, having done the same after Russia’s invasion of Crimea in 2014. Internet service remains, and the tactics of open source gatherers have matured over the past decade, demonstrating the potency of tracking conflicts in real time.


The core of this sleuthing is geolocation, due to its ease and impact. When a video or image of conflict surfaces, hobbyists scan the footage for landmarks or other clues, trying to pinpoint its location to verify its accuracy or debunk it as a propaganda attempt.



But they have grown more savvy, and the war in Ukraine has shown the breadth of intelligence hobbyists can gather through simple means. Some specialize in   flight tracking   and are able to show which military aircraft are flying near Ukrainian airspace at any time.   Others   use NASA’s   database of fires   to track “thermal anomalies” in Ukraine, to help back up claims of new fighting or shelling in a region.



John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab, said the sophistication and savvy of open source hobbyists is “remarkable,” and their work to document and verify footage of conflict will help stem Russia’s attempt to spread propaganda about the war.


“Facts are hard to come by in conflict,” he said in an interview. “It’s a tremendous source of information. It’s allowing the public and media writ large to have a much deeper view into this conflict.”



Eliot Higgins, the founder of investigative journalism media outlet Bellingcat, said he relies on the community’s work to document atrocities in Ukraine.



Last week, his organization released a   platform   to document potential war crimes in real time. Through the work of open source hobbyists and others, Bellingcat has gathered over 400 verified, geolocated, and tagged incidents of potential war crimes in Ukraine, ranging from hospital bombings, neighborhood strikes and other attacks that have killed or injured civilians.


Ukraine, Higgins said, will “be seen as the first conflict where [open source] information was gathered by an online community and turned into useful information that was used for accountability.”



Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.)  tweeted  in late-February that the OSINT community deserves “much respect” and may not realize how much of their work is “integrated into the broader work of the intelligence community.”



But for some, the growth in the number of hobbyists disseminating information in real time about the war in Ukraine comes with concerns. As more people get drawn to the hobby — one without professionally mandated standards — there’s concern their actions could put lives in danger, or unwittingly spread misinformation.


Justin Peden, a 20-year-old college student in Alabama, who goes by The Intel Crab  on Twitter, said the conflict in Ukraine has been a wake-up call. He is an established hobbyist in the open source intelligence community, with close to 240,000 followers on Twitter.


When war in Ukraine started, he was hooked, spending the first days of the conflict spending hours verifying videos coming out of the conflict. In early March, he received an image from someone in Kherson, a port city in southern Ukraine that is now occupied by Russians. The image, taken from a balcony, claimed to show Russian troops moving into the city.


Peden verified the image and posted the exact coordinates of the image on Twitter. But within minutes, he was worried, wondering if he had just identified a source and put them in harm’s way. Peden quickly deleted the post, but not before it had retweeted around 100 times.


Since then, Peden — whose Twitter profile photo is a crab holding a Ukrainian flag — has started limiting the amount of geolocating he does and thinking deeper about the ethics of the work: What information should be shared? Should hobbyists be held accountable if their findings are wrong? Should they be anonymous?


“Who do you yell at when it’s just a photo of a crab online?” he said, referring to his avatar.

Strick, of the Centre for Information Resilience, said these are natural growing pains for the community. As the ranks of the hobbyists swell, worrisome behaviors are cropping up, including people sharing conflict footage before precisely verifying it, or amplifying images of gore and sexual abuse without questioning the ethics of it.


Going forward, the community should adapt protocols, Strick said, such as   those   created by researchers at the University of California Berkeley and the United Nations that detail how to conduct open source investigations of war ethically.



And for some, such as Bellingcat’s Higgins, it marks the start of a new era in war — one where dropping bombs on a city or harming innocent civilians can’t easily be hidden.



“There will be many eyeballs watching,” he said.

Cat Zakrzewski contributed to this report.












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Hallux
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Hallux    2 years ago

Is nothing sacred? /S

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
1.1  devangelical  replied to  Hallux @1    2 years ago

difficult to hide from the lens of a camera...

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
1.2  Trout Giggles  replied to  Hallux @1    2 years ago

LOL

Not in the age of digital media it appears. I say good for these twitter spies.

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
2  Ender    2 years ago

A new day, a new age.

I guess things like this is why putin had to get rid of twitter and facebook.

 
 
 
Steve Ott
Professor Quiet
3  Steve Ott    2 years ago

While I applaud the efforts of these individuals and the good use to which the technology is being put, I also am wary, as the technology can also be used the other way.

What way you ask, keeping an eye on you and your neighbors.

 
 

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