sábado, 25 de julho de 2015

Porque treme vieira?

Ao ver a entrevista do vieira ao record fica a clara sensação de que vieira está desorientado. No seu último ano de mandato enfrenta uma inesperada crise de confiança e, aparentemente, uma profunda crise financeira.
Da entrevista destaco o seguinte:

1. vieira aponta o Sporting como principal candidato ao título, com a argumentação de que o nosso clube terá abandonado o rigor financeiro dos últimos anos. Vamos lá ver o que se entende por descontrolo financeiro:
  • O descontrolado Sporting contratou o JJ pagando um salário de 4,5 milhões/ano mais 1,5 milhões variáveis. Apesar deste valor ser um valor alto, não será difícil encontrar 2 jogadores que, somados, ganhem isso no benfica. É preciso não esquecer que os últimos dados divulgados apontavam para custos com pessoal trimestrais de 6 milhões no Sporting 12,9 no benfica e 18,2 no porto. Se só contabilizarmos o JJ nestas contas os custos do Sporting subirão 1,8 (estou a contabilizar pelo 6 milhões mais encargos) e os do benfica descerão na mesma medida. Com esta loucura os custos com pessoal trimestrais passam para 7,8 no Sporting e para 11,1 no benfica (estou a partir do princípio que JJ veio ganhar o mesmo que ganhava na luz apesar de toda a gente jurar que ele veio ganhar mais e que o rui "gel" vitória veio ganhar uma sandes de presunto e um sumol para treinar o clube do coração). Para chegarmos aos níveis de gastos das nádegas temos de andar muito;
  • O descontrolado Sporting pagou, até agora 7,9 milhões de euros pelos seus reforços. O poupado benfica pagou 9,2 milhões. Uma verdadeira loucura! Com a agravante do descontrolado Sporting já ter praticamente o plantel fechado (só deverão haver novidades se forem vendidos jogadores) enquanto o poupado benfica ainda tem muito para comprar;
  • O poupado benfica investiu em aquisições para o seu plantel neste último mandato do vieira 113,7 milhões de euros! O descontrolado Sporting investiu no mesmo período 29,45 milhões.
  • Mas perante este cenário vem logo o argumento de que o benfica tem investido muito mas tem vendido muito e bem nestes últimos anos com as vendas neste período a atingirem os 310,9 milhões de euros que geram um saldo positivo no período de 188 milhões. Números notáveis, sem dúvida. Mas isso deve querer dizer que o benfica deve ter conseguido reduzir de forma acentuada o seu passivo e ter dado resultados francamente positivos. O passivo aumentou (apenas no último ano houve um ligeiro recuo da dívida bancária) e os resultados têm oscilado entre o positivo e o negativo. Possivelmente este ano o cenário irá ser francamente positivo se tivermos em conta que as vendas deste ano chegam aos 90 milhões de EUT (Euros da Treta para os leigos 1 EUR = 4,29 EUT segundo dados do L'Equipe) e o investimento ainda não foi além dos 9,2 milhões de Euros. Aguardamos ansiosamente a divulgação de tão extraordinários dados. É verdade que as vendas do Sporting não têm atingido estes valores mas o passivo tem reduzido e os resultados inverteram a tendência de profundamente negativos para francamente positivos. Descontrolado Sporting e poupado benfica, novamente...
2. E a outra nádega vieira? Parece que é melhor não falar nela, porque o casamento está a passar por uma fase difícil e não vale a pena estar a piorar as coisas, pelo menos no que ao aspecto desportivo diz respeito. Em relação ao resto já lá vamos. Mas para o vieira, investir 20 milhões num imburla ou ir buscar o guarda-redes titular e capitão do real madrid não quer dizer nada e não coloca o porto como principal candidato ao título;

3. Diz o vieira que o JJ já há muito tempo que tinha tomado a decisão de sair. O que ele queria dizer era que ele já tinha tomado há muito a decisão de que o JJ ia sair. Quis despachá-lo para onde lhe convinha (quiçá ainda ganhar uma comissãozita via mendes) mas o JJ não estava na disposição de seguir um desterro à moda do vitó pereira. O homem já não vai para novo e não estava para isso. Ele sabia que em portugal o d. bufas já se tinha comprometido a não tocar no JJ e achava que o Sporting não tinha poderio financeiro nem a ousadia necessária para ir buscar o JJ. Aliás, há dois anos ele conseguiu segurar o JJ perante a violenta investida do godinho (LOL), não ia ser o garoto a conseguir tal proeza. FODEU-SE!!! Digo com as letras todas porque é a partir daqui que o tabuleiro pode ter virado;

4. O vieira vem depois lamentar-se que a outra nádega lhe tirou o tapete na liga e na questão do sorteio do árbitros. Este é para mim o grande mistério desta novela. Será este arrufo de namorados real? Juro que às vezes dou por mim a montar um enredo de romance de cordel onde os amantes fingem zangar-se para que as famílias (leia-se adeptos) não condenem tão vergonhosa e descarada relação, passando a encontrar-se em motéis de segunda em vez da quinta das lágrimas para não darem nas vistas. A relação libidinosa continua só que à vista de todos é dada uma aparência de que tudo esta a voltar ao que existia antes. Esta aproximação do porto às posições Sporting pode ser apenas para dar "corpo" a essa separação. O mesmo acontece com a saída do maxi para o porto, que poderá apenas ser um jeito que o bufas dá ao vieira que precisa desesperadamente de reduzir custos. Mas atenção que este meu devaneio pode ser realmente apenas isso e que o porto se viu ultrapassado pelo benfica no sistema e decidiu ir noutro caminho. Viu que a forma mais rápida de o fazer era apanhar a pequena onda que o Sporting tinha levantado e fazer dela um tsunami que limpe o benfica do sistema, tentando voltar impôr a sua força. Se o sorteio dos árbitros avançar e o duque perder as eleições, o benfica pode ver-se de fora dos círculos de poder de um dia para o outro. É curioso ver que alguns dos "amigos" do benfica começam a abandonar o barco: o estoril já mudou de lado (não me agrada vê-los do lado do Sporting, mas enfim) e até o guimarães está armado em Suíça e não apoia ninguém (tem o rabo preso dos dois lados). Como apoios completamente declarados sobram o belenenses (claro) e o salvador (que esta semana viu uma das suas empresas apanhada numa mega rede de corrupção em Moçambique e de quem ninguém praticamente falou). Vamos a ver para onde isto vai.

Resumindo o vieira está nervoso. Este é o último ano de mandato e se é verdade que nos últimos 3 anos as coisas dificilmente lhe podiam ter corrido melhor desportivamente, estes últimos meses vieram pôr muita areia na engrenagem. O bes berrou e uma das principais torneiras do benfica secou. Os amigos salgado e josé guilherme estão agora na merda e já não podem dar a mãozinha do costume. De uma posição de controlo absoluto do poder no futebol português o benfica passa para uma posição de aparente fragilidade:
  • Perde o treinador bicampeão para o principal rival;
  • Perde um dos mais simbólicos jogadores do clube para outro rival;
  • Pode perder o controlo da arbitragem;
  • Pode perder as eleições na liga;
  • Aparenta ter pouco poderio financeiro para reforçar o plantel e mesmo renovar com alguns jogadores (a renovação com o jonas parece estar complicada).
Isto em plena época de renovações de lugar de época e de assinaturas da btv pode ser catastrófico. É sabido que as receitas do benfica são as que mais dependem dos resultados (como bem explica o Grande Artista Goleador aqui). Instalando-se uma crise de confiança e de resultados (2 jogos 2 derrotas) essas receitas podem cair a pique. Parece que única forma que o benfica encontrou de tentar manter a sua confiança em alta é atacando o Sporting. Anda a distribuir dinheiro em barda entre jornalistas, paineleiros, comentadores, ex-dirigentes, ex-futebolistas para atacarem de forma violenta o Sporting. Faz lembrar um bully que leva um valente pêro nos queixos do puto reguila da escola e só manda recados pelos amigos porque, do puto, tem medo. Pagar a esta gente toda custa um décimo do ordenado de um jogador por mês, por isso vamos continuar a assistir a este decadente espetáculo.

Do nosso lado resta ir respondendo aos ataques fora e dentro de campo. Ao contrário do que nos querem vender, esta é uma época fundamental para o benfica do vieira. Se este ano corre mal, a responsabilidade vai toda para a incompetência do vieira e isso pode custar-lhe um novo mandato. Eu até gostava de o ver lá mais anos porque acho que quanto mais tempo passar mais ele lixa aquilo, mas ao mesmo tempo gosto de ver um trafulha exposto o mais rápido possível, por isso acho que devemos fazer tudo para lhe acertar vários pêros nos queixos até o pôr totalmente KO! E que o próximo seja já uma vitória na Supertaça!

SL

PS: Entretanto parece que o sorteio dos árbitros foi chumbado enquanto escrevia o post. O meu ponto 4 é sem dúvida o mistério do ano.



Sobre o jogo de ontem

Apesar de não ter visto o jogo 100% concentrado (estava a trabalhar) deu para tirar algumas ilações:

  1. marco silva e jesus têm ideias de jogo muito diferentes e isso notou-se bastante. A forma de defender alterou-se substancialmente e isso notou-se. Ainda há muita ideia para assimilar e muitas movimentações para coordenar. Foram várias as situações em que os defesas não reagiram nem se posicionaram como o treinador deseja. Isso foi evidente;
  2. Construção de jogo totalmente diferente com mais linhas de passe abertas e com o médio defensivo a cair frequentemente na mesma linha dos centrais, tornando estes uma alternativa de construção. Laterais quase sempre subidos e com muitas movimentações dos extremos para o meio. Muito diferente do que estávamos habituados;
  3. No ataque a velocidade de execução que é aplicada é bastante superior o que vai originar menos posse de bola, maior número de perdas de bola, mas também criação de mais oportunidades e de soluções de ataque mais variadas, principalmente se formos capazes de pressionar logo que perdemos a bola;
  4. Pelo jogo de ontem fiquei com ideia de que o segundo avançado que jogar com o Slimani vai ser sempre um misto entre um número 10 e um segundo avançado. Ontem o André Martins teve essa função e penso que o vamos ver a jogar algumas vezes ao lado do Slimani, que funcionará como um ponta de lança mais fixo. A alternativa será jogar com dois avançados mais móveis como aconteceu na segunda parte com o Teo e o Fredy. Uma das grandes dúvidas que tenho na minha cabeça é onde pode encaixar o Bryan Ruiz: a extremo ou 2º avançado? Poderá ser uma alternativa para fazer dupla com Slimani, mas confesso que estou muito curioso sobre o papel que o JJ lhe vai dar;
  5. Rui Patrício continua enorme entre os postes. Volto a referir que precisa de trabalhar o jogo aéreo, mas esse é de facto o único aspecto menos positivo de um enorme guarda-redes;
  6. Gelson Martins pode vir a ser um caso sério. Confesso que se o miúdo continuar assim uma não renovação e venda do Carrillo deixa-me menos preocupado;
  7. Rúben Semedo está a ser trabalhado para ser alternativa ao William Carvalho. Tem um perfil atlético que o JJ gosta já o vimos fazer bons jogadores com menos potencial, por isso pode vir a ser uma surpresa, mas ainda é muito cedo para saber o que vai acontecer (e já agora parem de chatear o miúdo por ser ou ter sido lampião, isso muda e não quer dizer nada se for um bom profissional. Alguém dúvida que o Carlos Manuel, o Gomes, o Jaime Pacheco, o Sousa e mesmo o Paulo Sousa eram de outros clubes no seu coração? Ainda assim, não tenho dúvidas que defenderam as nossas cores de forma exemplar!);
  8. Em relação às aquisições que jogaram, não vou fazer grandes referências em particular por achar que é demasiado cedo para tal. No entanto, vi coisas muito interessantes no Teo;
  9. Em relação à aposta na formação, gostei de ver e espero que se mantenha. Era uma excelente prova de que o JJ sabe trabalhar com a formação. Além do Gelson e do Rúben, gostei de ver o Iuri, o Esgaio e o Wallyson, com diferenças entre eles mas foi apenas um jogo. Vamos a ver como evoluem.
SL

segunda-feira, 20 de julho de 2015

Estamos no Twitter

Sigam-nos em @furialeonina ou carreguem no botão aqui ao lado!

Oh mourinho e se fosses dar música a outro?

Nota prévia: Penso que mourinho é o melhor treinador português da actualidade. Gosta de dar-se a ares de grande arrogância, mas penso que pessoalmente até será um personagem diferente. No entanto, gosta de cultivar ódios de estimação e por vezes foge-lhe a mão para a imbecilidade. Lembro-me sempre do episódio da camisola do Rui Jorge como um dos melhores exemplos dessa imbecilidade.

Ontem mourinho criticou a vertigem inflaccionista em que o futebol entrou. Como exemplo deu o que o Sporting estava a gastar em jogadores e treinadores num país que passa por grandes dificuldades, tendo criticado também o porto. Sobre o seu benfica... nada. Sabíamos que o homem era adepto do benfica, mas ontem ficámos a saber que é mais um lampião que gosta de servir de moço de recados, além de dar umas alfinetadas em dois ódios de estimação. Tudo estaria certo, se a visão, no que diz respeito ao Sporting não tivesse totalmente enviesada. Vamos por partes:
  1. O Sporting investiu até ao momento em jogadores 7,9 milhões de euros em aquisições. O benfica 9,2 milhões (todos os dados mencionados neste post podem ser consultados em tansfermarkt.com). Em relação a jogadores dar o exemplo do Sporting não faz sentido sem falar do benfica;
  2. O Sporting terá, alegadamente, feito um contrato de 4,5 milhões/ano + 1,5 milhões de prémios, com Jorge Jesus. É muito dinheiro, é verdade mas o rui "gel" vitória também deve ganhar uns 750 mil/ano por isso, no global, no global o Sporting estará a gastar mais 2,5 milhões que o benfica se juntarmos (de forma tosca), os jogadores e o treinador. Não é propriamente uma fortuna. Mais uma vez não falar do benfica, não faz sentido;
  3. Onde andava o mourinho quando o benfica gastou 48,7 milhões em 13/14 e 39 milhões em 14/15? O Sporting nessas duas épocas investiu 4,43 e 11,12 milhões respectivamente;
  4. O mourinho a falar de inflacção no futebol?!?! Ele que comprou paulo ferreira por 20 milhões de euros? Que o ano passado gastou 137 milhões e há 2 anos 127 milhões.
 Enfim, a única lógica que há nestas declarações é o mourinho aproveitar para dar uma alfinetada no casillas com quem tem contas para ajustar desde os tempos do real madrid e no Jorge Jesus por quem tem vindo a cultivar um profundo ódio de estimação. Penso que esse ódio tem origem no facto de Jorge Jesus ser o treinador que mais o ameaça no título de melhor treinador português e, principalmente, por ver no JJ um bronco sobrevalorizado. Para ele que é fruto de muito estudo, muito trabalho e muito investimento pessoal em técnicas de gestão de equipas, olha para JJ e vê um fruto puro do instinto e do talento natural, a quem lhe custou muito menos tempo a queimar pestana para chegar onde chegou.

O que acaba por ser surpreendente é a forma trapalhona como mourinho faz as críticas. Já o vi fazer críticas bem mais hábeis e inteligentemente construídas do que estas. Estará a perder o jeito para os famosos mind games? Ou na ânsia de mandar um recado ou agradar ao mendes, precipitou-se?

SL

sábado, 18 de julho de 2015

Especial: Trolls profissionais - Parte 3

Desculpem o post gigantesco, mas há quem ainda faça artigos jornalísticos à moda antiga: com profundidade, fontes confirmadas e dando várias visões sobre o mesmo assunto. Este é um desses casos e que, por isso, merece ser partilhado-

Reconheço que esta é uma visão "americana" da questão, mas ainda assim demonstra como a internet se tornou um perigo para quem quer estar correctamente informado. Vivemos numa era em que somos inundados com informação, o problema é que qualquer um pode manipular essa informação. A leitura do que anda na internet deve ser feita com um grande espírito crítico e recorrendo a vários pontos de vista sobre o mesmo assunto.

No entanto, de uma coisa tenho a certeza: há muitas forças a manipular a opinião pública em todos os aspectos da nossa sociedade. Este artigo faz-nos reflectir sobre a forma como esta manipulação é feita ao nível da política internacional (e não só), além de ajudar-nos a pensar como estas estratégias são plasmadas em outras áreas, principalmente nas que têm maior visibilidade social. O futebol tem características que faz com que tenha uma visibilidade social muito elevada:

  1. Movimenta enormes somas de dinheiro (limpo e sujo);
  2. Depende, em grande parte, da paixão das pessoas;
  3. É uma actividade cuja parte financeira é alvo de muito pouca regulação:
  4. Alimenta várias "indústrias" paralelas: imprensa especializada, transmissões televisivas, patrocínios, negócios imobiliários, construção, etc.;
  5. É o desporto de maior implantação a nível mundial, estimando-se que metade da população do globo (3 a 3,5 mil milhões de pessoas) o acompanhe e que 250 milhões o pratiquem.

Isto faz com que seja uma alvo óbvio de manipulação.


The Agency

From a nondescript office building in St. Petersburg, Russia, an army of well-paid “trolls” has tried to wreak havoc all around the Internet — and in real-life American communities.

Around 8:30 a.m. on Sept. 11 last year, Duval Arthur, director of the Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness for St. Mary Parish, Louisiana, got a call from a resident who had just received a disturbing text message. “Toxic fume hazard warning in this area until 1:30 PM,” the message read. “Take Shelter. Check Local Media and columbiachemical.com.”

St. Mary Parish is home to many processing plants for chemicals and natural gas, and keeping track of dangerous accidents at those plants is Arthur’s job. But he hadn’t heard of any chemical release that morning. In fact, he hadn’t even heard of Columbia Chemical. St. Mary Parish had a Columbian Chemicals plant, which made carbon black, a petroleum product used in rubber and plastics. But he’d heard nothing from them that morning, either. Soon, two other residents called and reported the same text message. Arthur was worried: Had one of his employees sent out an alert without telling him?

If Arthur had checked Twitter, he might have become much more worried. Hundreds of Twitter accounts were documenting a disaster right down the road. “A powerful explosion heard from miles away happened at a chemical plant in Centerville, Louisiana #ColumbianChemicals,” a man named Jon Merritt tweeted. The #ColumbianChemicals hashtag was full of eyewitness accounts of the horror in Centerville. @AnnRussela shared an image of flames engulfing the plant. @Ksarah12 posted a video of surveillance footage from a local gas station, capturing the flash of the explosion. Others shared a video in which thick black smoke rose in the distance.

Dozens of journalists, media outlets and politicians, from Louisiana to New York City, found their Twitter accounts inundated with messages about the disaster. “Heather, I’m sure that the explosion at the #ColumbianChemicals is really dangerous. Louisiana is really screwed now,” a user named @EricTraPPP tweeted at the New Orleans Times-Picayune reporter Heather Nolan. Another posted a screenshot of CNN’s home page, showing that the story had already made national news. ISIS had claimed credit for the attack, according to one YouTube video; in it, a man showed his TV screen, tuned to an Arabic news channel, on which masked ISIS fighters delivered a speech next to looping footage of an explosion. A woman named Anna McClaren (@zpokodon9) tweeted at Karl Rove: “Karl, Is this really ISIS who is responsible for #ColumbianChemicals? Tell @Obama that we should bomb Iraq!” But anyone who took the trouble to check CNN.com would have found no news of a spectacular Sept. 11 attack by ISIS. It was all fake: the screenshot, the videos, the photographs.

In St. Mary Parish, Duval Arthur quickly made a few calls and found that none of his employees had sent the alert. He called Columbian Chemicals, which reported no problems at the plant. Roughly two hours after the first text message was sent, the company put out a news release, explaining that reports of an explosion were false. When I called Arthur a few months later, he dismissed the incident as a tasteless prank, timed to the anniversary of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. “Personally I think it’s just a real sad, sick sense of humor,” he told me. “It was just someone who just liked scaring the daylights out of people.” Authorities, he said, had tried to trace the numbers that the text messages had come from, but with no luck. (The F.B.I. told me the investigation was still open.)

The Columbian Chemicals hoax was not some simple prank by a bored sadist. It was a highly coordinated disinformation campaign, involving dozens of fake accounts that posted hundreds of tweets for hours, targeting a list of figures precisely chosen to generate maximum attention. The perpetrators didn’t just doctor screenshots from CNN; they also created fully functional clones of the websites of Louisiana TV stations and newspapers. The YouTube video of the man watching TV had been tailor-made for the project. A Wikipedia page was even created for the Columbian Chemicals disaster, which cited the fake YouTube video. As the virtual assault unfolded, it was complemented by text messages to actual residents in St. Mary Parish. It must have taken a team of programmers and content producers to pull off.

And the hoax was just one in a wave of similar attacks during the second half of last year. On Dec. 13, two months after a handful of Ebola cases in the United States touched off a minor media panic, many of the same Twitter accounts used to spread the Columbian Chemicals hoax began to post about an outbreak of Ebola in Atlanta. The campaign followed the same pattern of fake news reports and videos, this time under the hashtag #EbolaInAtlanta, which briefly trended in Atlanta. Again, the attention to detail was remarkable, suggesting a tremendous amount of effort. A YouTube video showed a team of hazmat-suited medical workers transporting a victim from the airport. Beyoncé’s recent single “7/11” played in the background, an apparent attempt to establish the video’s contemporaneity. A truck in the parking lot sported the logo of the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

On the same day as the Ebola hoax, a totally different group of accounts began spreading a rumor that an unarmed black woman had been shot to death by police. They all used the hashtag #shockingmurderinatlanta. Here again, the hoax seemed designed to piggyback on real public anxiety; that summer and fall were marked by protests over the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. In this case, a blurry video purports to show the shooting, as an onlooker narrates. Watching it, I thought I recognized the voice — it sounded the same as the man watching TV in the Columbian Chemicals video, the one in which ISIS supposedly claims responsibility. The accent was unmistakable, if unplaceable, and in both videos he was making a very strained attempt to sound American. Somehow the result was vaguely Australian.

Who was behind all of this? When I stumbled on it last fall, I had an idea. I was already investigating a shadowy organization in St. Petersburg, Russia, that spreads false information on the Internet. It has gone by a few names, but I will refer to it by its best known: the Internet Research Agency. The agency had become known for employing hundreds of Russians to post pro-Kremlin propaganda online under fake identities, including on Twitter, in order to create the illusion of a massive army of supporters; it has often been called a “troll farm.” The more I investigated this group, the more links I discovered between it and the hoaxes. In April, I went to St. Petersburg to learn more about the agency and its brand of information warfare, which it has aggressively deployed against political opponents at home, Russia’s perceived enemies abroad and, more recently, me.

Seven months after the Columbian Chemicals hoax, I was in a dim restaurant in St. Petersburg, peering out the window at an office building at 55 Savushkina Street, the last known home of the Internet Research Agency. It sits in St. Petersburg’s northwestern Primorsky District, a quiet neighborhood of ugly Soviet apartment buildings and equally ugly new office complexes. Among the latter is 55 Savushkina; from the front, its perfect gray symmetry, framed by the rectangular pillars that flank its entrance, suggests the grim impenetrability of a medieval fortress. Behind the glass doors, a pair of metal turnstiles stand guard at the top of a short flight of stairs in the lobby. At 9 o’clock on this Friday night in April, except for the stairwell and the lobby, the building was entirely dark.

This puzzled my dining companion, a former agency employee named Ludmila Savchuk. She shook her head as she lifted the heavy floral curtain to take another look. It was a traditional Russian restaurant, with a dining room done up like a parlor from the early 1900s, complete with bentwood chairs and a vintage globe that showed Alaska as part of Russia. Savchuk’s 5-year-old son sat next to her, slurping down a bowl of ukha, a traditional fish soup. For two and a half months, Savchuk told me, she had worked 12-hour shifts in the building, always beginning at 9 a.m. and finishing at 9 p.m., at which point she and her co-workers would eagerly stream out the door at once. “At 9 p.m. sharp, there should be a crowd of people walking outside the building,” she said. “Nine p.m. sharp.” One Russian newspaper put the number of employees at 400, with a budget of at least 20 million rubles (roughly $400,000) a month. During her time in the organization, there were many departments, creating content for every popular social network: LiveJournal, which remains popular in Russia; VKontakte, Russia’s homegrown version of Facebook; Facebook; Twitter; Instagram; and the comment sections of Russian news outlets. One employee estimated the operation filled 40 rooms.

Every day at the Internet Research Agency was essentially the same, Savchuk told me. The first thing employees did upon arriving at their desks was to switch on an Internet proxy service, which hid their I.P. addresses from the places they posted; those digital addresses can sometimes be used to reveal the real identity of the poster. Savchuk would be given a list of the opinions she was responsible for promulgating that day. Workers received a constant stream of “technical tasks” — point-by-point exegeses of the themes they were to address, all pegged to the latest news. Ukraine was always a major topic, because of the civil war there between Russian-backed separatists and the Ukrainian Army; Savchuk and her co-workers would post comments that disparaged the Ukrainian president, Petro Poroshenko, and highlighted Ukrainian Army atrocities. Russian domestic affairs were also a major topic. Last year, after a financial crisis hit Russia and the ruble collapsed, the professional trolls left optimistic posts about the pace of recovery. Savchuk also says that in March, after the opposition leader Boris Nemtsov was murdered, she and her entire team were moved to the department that left comments on the websites of Russian news outlets and ordered to suggest that the opposition itself had set up the murder.

Savchuk told me she shared an office with about a half-dozen teammates. It was smaller than most, because she worked in the elite Special Projects department. While other workers churned out blandly pro-Kremlin comments, her department created appealing online characters who were supposed to stand out from the horde. Savchuk posed as three of these creations, running a blog for each one on LiveJournal. One alter ego was a fortuneteller named Cantadora. The spirit world offered Cantadora insight into relationships, weight loss, feng shui — and, occasionally, geopolitics. Energies she discerned in the universe invariably showed that its arc bent toward Russia. She foretold glory for Vladimir Putin, defeat for Barack Obama and Petro Poroshenko. The point was to weave propaganda seamlessly into what appeared to be the nonpolitical musings of an everyday person.

In fact, she was a troll. The word “troll” was popularized in the early 1990s to denounce the people who derailed conversation on Usenet discussion lists with interminable flame wars, or spammed chat rooms with streams of disgusting photos, choking users with a cloud of filth. As the Internet has grown, the problem posed by trolls has grown more salient even as their tactics have remained remarkably constant. Today an ISIS supporter might adopt a pseudonym to harass a critical journalist on Twitter, or a right-wing agitator in the United States might smear demonstrations against police brutality by posing as a thieving, violent protester. Any major conflict is accompanied by a raging online battle between trolls on both sides.

As Savchuk and other former employees describe it, the Internet Research Agency had industrialized the art of trolling. Management was obsessed with statistics — page views, number of posts, a blog’s place on LiveJournal’s traffic charts — and team leaders compelled hard work through a system of bonuses and fines. “It was a very strong corporate feeling,” Savchuk says. Her schedule gave her two 12-hour days in a row, followed by two days off. Over those two shifts she had to meet a quota of five political posts, 10 nonpolitical posts and 150 to 200 comments on other workers’ posts. The grueling schedule wore her down. She began to feel queasy, she said, posting vitriol about opposition leaders of whom she had no actual opinion, or writing nasty words about Ukrainians when some of her closest acquaintances, including her own ex-husband, were Ukrainian.

Employees were mostly in their 20s but were drawn from a broad cross-section of Russian society. It seemed as if the agency’s task was so large that it would hire almost anyone who responded to the many ads it posted on job boards, no matter how undereducated or politically ignorant they were. Posts teemed with logical and grammatical errors. “They were so stupid,” says Marat Burkhardt, who worked for two months in the department of forums, posting 135 comments a day on little-read message boards about remote Russian towns. “You see these people with a lot of tattoos. They’re so cool, like they’re from New York; very hip clothing, very hip tattoos, like they’re from Williamsburg. But they are stupid.” In office conversation, they used gay slurs to refer to Petro Poroshenko and called Barack Obama a monkey. Management tried to rectify their ignorance with grammar classes. Others had “politology” classes to outline the proper Russian point of view on current events.

Yet the exact point of their work was left unclear to them. The handful of employees I spoke with did not even know the name of the company’s chief executive. They had signed a nondisclosure agreement but no official contract. Salaries were surprisingly high for the work; Savchuk’s was 41,000 rubles a month ($777), or as much as a tenured university professor earns. “I can’t say they clearly explain to you what your purpose there is,” Savchuk says. “But they created such an atmosphere that people would understand they were doing something important and secretive and very highly paid. And that they won’t be able to find a job like this anywhere else.”

Savchuk is 34, but her taste in clothes runs toward the teenage: The night of our dinner she wore a plaid dress and a billowing neon yellow jacket, and her head was swaddled in a fuzzy hood with animal ears. She credits her innocent appearance for allowing her to infiltrate the Internet Research Agency without raising alarms. While employed there, she copied dozens of documents to her personal email account and also plied her co-workers for information. She made a clandestine video of the office. In February, she leaked it all to a reporter for Moi Raion, a local newspaper known for its independent reporting. The documents, together with her story, offered the most detailed look yet into the daily life of a pro-Kremlin troll. Though she quit the agency the day the exposé was published, she was continuing her surveillance from the outside. She brought a camera to our dinner in hopes of documenting the changing of the shifts, which she planned to post to the VKontakte page of Information Peace, the group she founded to fight the agency. Her ultimate goal is to shut it down entirely, believing that its information warfare is contributing to an increasingly dark atmosphere in Russia. “Information peace is the start of real peace,” she says.

But at 10 minutes after 9 p.m., still no crowd had entered or left 55 Savushkina. Finally, around 9:30, a group of five young people approached the building and walked inside. Savchuk perked up, grabbed the camera and began to film the scene. Now more started filtering in, each of them stopping at the guard desk to check in. I counted at least 30 in all. Savchuk told me with pride that she believed the agency had changed its schedule to confound journalists, who began to stake out the place after her exposé.

Savchuk is accustomed to antagonizing powerful people. She has been a longtime environmental activist in the town of Pushkin, the suburb of St. Petersburg where she lives; her main cause before the troll farm was saving forests and parks from being paved over by well-connected developers. Last year she even ran for a seat on her municipal council as an independent, which in Russia requires a level of optimism bordering on delusion. On Election Day, she told me, state employees — health care workers, teachers, law enforcement, etc. — came to the polls wielding lists of candidates they had been “encouraged” to vote for, all of them associated with United Russia, the governing party of Vladimir Putin. (She lost her race.) Savchuk has filed a lawsuit against the Internet Research Agency for violating labor rights laws, citing the lack of official contracts. She has enlisted the help of a well-known human rights lawyer named Ivan Pavlov, who has spent years fighting for transparency laws in Russia; he took on Savchuk’s case in hopes that it would force the agency to answer questions about its business on the record.

Several Russian media outlets have claimed that the agency is funded by Evgeny Prigozhin, an oligarch restaurateur called “the Kremlin’s chef” in the independent press for his lucrative government contracts and his close relationship with Putin. When a reporter from the opposition paper Novaya Gazeta infiltrated the agency posing as a job seeker, she discovered that one of the team leaders was an employee of Prigozhin’s Concord holding company. (The reporter was familiar with her because the woman was famous among journalists for having been deployed by Prigozhin to spy on Novaya Gazeta.) The suspicion around Prigozhin was bolstered when emails leaked by hackers showed an accountant at Concord approving payments to the agency. If the speculation is accurate, it would not be the first time that Prigozhin has used his enormous wealth to fund quixotic schemes against his enemies: According to Novaya Gazeta, a documentary he backed, which later ran on the Kremlin-controlled NTV, claimed that the protesters who participated in the enormous anti-Putin demonstrations of 2011 were paid agents provocateurs, some of them bribed by United States government officials, who fed them cookies. “I think of him as Dr. Evil,” says Andrei Soshnikov, the reporter at Moi Raion to whom Savchuk leaked her documents. (My calls to Concord went unreturned.)

Savchuk’s revelations about the agency have fascinated Russia not because they are shocking but because they confirm what everyone has long suspected: The Russian Internet is awash in trolls. “This troll business becomes more popular year by year,” says Platon Mamatov, who says that he ran his own troll farm in the Ural Mountains from 2008 to 2013. During that time he employed from 20 to 40 people, mostly students and young mothers, to carry out online tasks for Kremlin contacts and local and regional authorities from Putin’s United Russia party. Mamatov says there are scores of operations like his around the country, working for government authorities at every level. Because the industry is secretive, with its funds funneled through a maze of innocuous-sounding contracts and shell businesses, it is difficult to estimate exactly how many people are at work trolling today. But Mamatov claims “there are thousands — I’m not sure about how many, but yes, really, thousands.”

The boom in pro-Kremlin trolling can be traced to the antigovernment protests of 2011, when tens of thousands of people took to the streets after evidence of fraud in the recent Parliamentary election emerged. The protests were organized largely over Facebook and Twitter and spearheaded by leaders, like the anticorruption crusader Alexei Navalny, who used LiveJournal blogs to mobilize support. The following year, when Vyascheslav Volodin, the new deputy head of Putin’s administration and architect of his domestic policy, came into office, one of his main tasks was to rein in the Internet. Volodin, a lawyer who studied engineering in college, approached the problem as if it were a design flaw in a heating system. Forbes Russia reported that Volodin installed in his office a custom-designed computer terminal loaded with a system called Prism, which monitored public sentiment online using 60 million sources. According to the website of its manufacturer, Prism “actively tracks the social media activities that result in increased social tension, disorderly conduct, protest sentiments and extremism.” Or, as Forbes put it, “Prism sees social media as a battlefield.”

The battle was conducted on multiple fronts. Laws were passed requiring bloggers to register with the state. A blacklist allowed the government to censor websites without a court order. Internet platforms like Yandex were subjected to political pressure, while others, like VKontakte, were brought under the control of Kremlin allies. Putin gave ideological cover to the crackdown by calling the entire Internet a “C.I.A. project,” one that Russia needed to be protected from. Restrictions online were paired with a new wave of digital propaganda. The government consulted with the same public relations firms that worked with major corporate brands on social-media strategy. It began paying fashion and fitness bloggers to place pro-Kremlin material among innocuous posts about shoes and diets, according to Yelizaveta Surnacheva, a journalist with the magazine Kommersant Vlast. Surnacheva told me over Skype that the government was even trying to place propaganda with popular gay bloggers — a surprising choice given the notorious new law against “gay propaganda,” which fines anyone who promotes homosexuality to minors.

All of this has contributed to a dawning sense, among the Russian journalists and activists I spoke with, that the Internet is no longer a natural medium for political opposition. “The myth that the Internet is controlled by the opposition is very, very old,” says Leonid Volkov, a liberal politician and campaign manager to Alexei Navalny. “It’s not true since at least three years.” Part of this is simple demographics: The Internet audience has expanded from its early adopters, who were more likely to be well-educated liberal intelligentsia, to the whole of Russia, which overwhelmingly supports Putin. Also, by working every day to spread Kremlin propaganda, the paid trolls have made it impossible for the normal Internet user to separate truth from fiction.

“The point is to spoil it, to create the atmosphere of hate, to make it so stinky that normal people won’t want to touch it,” Volkov said, when we met in the office of Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation. “You have to remember the Internet population of Russia is just over 50 percent. The rest are yet to join, and when they join it’s very important what is their first impression.” The Internet still remains the one medium where the opposition can reliably get its message out. But their message is now surrounded by so much garbage from trolls that readers can become resistant before the message even gets to them. During the protests, a favorite tactic of the opposition was making anti-Putin hashtags trend on Twitter. Today, waves of trolls and bots regularly promote pro-Putin hashtags. What once was an exhilarating act of popular defiance now feels empty. “It kind of discredited the idea of political hashtags,” says Ilya Klishin, the web editor for the independent television station TV Rain who, in 2011, created the Facebook page for the antigovernment protests.

Russia’s information war might be thought of as the biggest trolling operation in history, and its target is nothing less than the utility of the Internet as a democratic space. In the midst of such a war, the Runet (as the Russian Internet is often called) can be an unpleasant place for anyone caught in the crossfire. Soon after I met Leonid Volkov, he wrote a post on his Facebook wall about our interview, saying that he had spoken with someone from The New York Times. A former pro-Kremlin blogger later warned me about this. Kremlin allies, he explained, monitored Volkov’s page, and now they would be on guard. “That was not smart,” he said.

The chain that links the Columbian Chemicals hoax to the Internet Research Agency begins with an act of digital subterfuge perpetrated by its online enemies. Last summer, a group called Anonymous International — believed to be unaffiliated with the well-known hacktivist group Anonymous — published a cache of hundreds of emails said to have been stolen from employees at the agency. It was just one hack in a long series that Anonymous International had carried out against the Kremlin in recent months. The group leaked embarrassing photos of Putin allies and incriminating emails among officials. It claimed to have hacked into Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev’s phone, and reportedly hacked his Twitter account, tweeting: “I’m resigning. I am ashamed of this government’s actions. Forgive me.”

The emails indicated that the Internet Research Agency had begun to troll in English. One document outlined a project called “World Translation”; the problem, it explained, was that the foreign Internet was biased four to one against Russia, and the project aimed to change the ratio. Another email contained a spreadsheet that listed some of the troll accounts the agency was using on the English-language web. After BuzzFeed reported on the leak, I used the spreadsheet to start mapping the network of accounts on Facebook and Twitter, trying to draw connections.

One account was called “I Am Ass.” Ass had a Twitter account, an Instagram account, multiple Facebook accounts and his own website. In his avatars, Ass was depicted as a pair of cartoon buttocks with an ugly, smirking face. He filled his social-media presences with links to news articles, along with his own commentary. Ass had a puerile sense of humor and only a rudimentary grasp of the English language. He also really hated Barack Obama. Ass denounced Obama in posts strewn with all-caps rants and scatological puns. One characteristic post linked to a news article about an ISIS massacre in Iraq, which Ass shared on Facebook with the comment: “I’m scared and farting! ISIS is a monster awakened by Obama when he unleashed this disastrous Iraq war!”

Despite his unpleasant disposition, Ass had a half-dozen or so fans who regularly liked and commented on his posts. These fans shared some unusual characteristics. Their Facebook accounts had all been created in the summer of 2014. They all appeared to be well-dressed young men and women who lived in large American cities, yet they seemed to have no real-life friends. Instead, they spent their free time leaving anti-Obama comments on the Facebook posts of American media outlets like CNN, Politico and Fox News. Their main Facebook interactions, especially those of the women, appeared to be with strangers who commented on their physical appearance. The women were all very attractive — so attractive, indeed, that a search revealed that some of their profile photos had been stolen from models and actors. It became clear that the vast majority of Ass’s fans were not real people. They were also trolls.

I friended as many of the trolls on Facebook as I could and began to observe their ways. Most of the content they shared was drawn from a network of other pages that, like Ass’s, were clearly meant to produce entertaining and shareable social-media content. There was the patriotic Spread Your Wings, which described itself as “a community for everyone whose heart is with America.” Spread Your Wings posted photos of American flags and memes about how great it was to be an American, but the patriotism rang hollow once you tried to parse the frequent criticisms of Obama, an incoherent mishmash of liberal and conservative attacks that no actual American would espouse. There was also Art Gone Conscious, which posted bad art and then tenuously connected it to Obama’s policy failures, and the self-explanatory Celebrities Against Obama. The posts churned out every day by this network of pages were commented on and shared by the same group of trolls, a virtual Potemkin village of disaffected Americans.

After following the accounts for a few weeks, I saw a strange notification on Facebook. One account, which claimed to be a woman from Seattle named Polly Turner, RSVPed to a real-life event. It was a talk in New York City to commemorate the opening of an art exhibit called Material Evidence. I was vaguely aware of Material Evidence, thanks to eye-catching advertisements that had appeared in subway stations and on the sides of buses throughout New York City: a black-and-white photo of masked men in camouflage, overlaid with the slogan “Syria, Ukraine … Who’s Next?” Material Evidence’s website described it as a traveling exhibition that would reveal “the full truth” about the civil war in Syria, as well as about 2014’s Euromaidan revolution in Ukraine, through a combination of “unique footage, artefacts, video.” I clicked on the Material Evidence talk and saw that a number of other trolls had been invited, including my old friend I Am Ass.

Walking into Material Evidence, mounted last September in the cavernous ArtBeam gallery in Chelsea, was like walking into a real-life version of the hall of mirrors I’d stumbled into on Facebook. A sign at the front declared that the show did not “support a specific political goal,” but the message became clear as soon as I began to browse the images. Large, well-composed photos testified to the barbarity of the Syrian rebels, bent on slaughtering handsome Syrian soldiers and innocent civilians alike. A grim panorama showed a gymnasium supposedly used by rebels to torture prisoners. There was a heroic, sunlit portrait of a Syrian Army officer. A room hidden behind a curtain displayed gory photos of rebel-caused civilian causalities, “provided by the Syrian ministry of defense.”

Then there were the pictures from the Ukrainian revolution, which focused almost exclusively on the Right Sector, a small group of violent, right-wing, anti-Russian protesters with a fondness for black balaclavas. Russian authorities have seized upon Right Sector to paint the entire revolution, backed by a huge swath of Ukrainian society, as orchestrated by neo-fascist thugs. The show’s decision to juxtapose the rebellions in Syria and Ukraine was never clearly explained, perhaps because the only connection possible was that both targeted leaders supported by Russia.

On the floor in front of many of the photos sat the actual items that appeared in them, displayed under glass cases. How, exactly, did organizers procure the very same battered motorcycle helmet that a Ukrainian protester wore in a photo while brawling with riot police? Who had fronted the money to purchase a mangled white van, supposedly used by Syrian rebels in a botched suicide bombing, and transport it to New York City? Few answers were forthcoming from Benjamin Hiller, the Berlin-based German-American photojournalist who was put forth as the curator of Material Evidence. He sat at a table in the front of the gallery, a heavyset bearded man dressed entirely in black. He told me that the show had been organized by an independent collective of European, Russian and Syrian war photographers who were fed up with the one-sided view of conflicts presented by Western media. He said they simply wanted to show the “other side.” Hiller claimed that the funds to rent the space, take out the ads, transport the material and create a $40,000 grant advertised on the Material Evidence website had been raised through “crowdfunding.” (Hiller has since left the organization and says that because of the show’s “misinformations” and “nonjournalistic approach,” he “does not want to be affiliated anymore with the project.”)

When I got home, I searched Twitter for signs of a campaign. Sure enough, dozens of accounts had been spamming rave reviews under the hashtag #MaterialEvidence. I clicked on one, a young woman in aviator sunglasses calling herself Zoe Foreman. (I later discovered her avatar had been stolen.) Most of her tweets were unremarkable song lyrics and inspirational quotes. But on Sept. 11 of last year, she spent hours spamming politicians and journalists about a horrific chemical plant explosion in St. Mary Parish, La. The source field on Twitter showed that the tweets Zoe Foreman — and the majority of other trolls — sent about #ColumbianChemicals were posted using a tool called Masss Post, which is associated with a nonworking page on the domain Add1.ru. According to online records, Add1​.ru was originally registered in January 2009 by Mikhail Burchik, whose email address remained connected to the domain until 2012. Documents leaked by Anonymous International listed a Mikhail Burchik as the executive director of the Internet Research Agency.

In early February, I called Burchik, a young tech entrepreneur in St. Petersburg, to ask him about the hoax and its connection to the Internet Research Agency. In an article for the newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, the German journalist Julian Hans had claimed that Burchik confirmed the authenticity of the leaked documents. But when I called Burchik, he denied working at the Internet Research Agency. “I have heard of it, but I don’t work in this organization,” he said. Burchik said he had never heard of the Masss Post app; he had no specific memory of the Add1.ru domain, he said, but he noted that he had bought and sold many domains and didn’t remember them all. Burchik suggested that perhaps a different Mikhail Burchik was the agency’s executive director. But the email address used by the Mikhail Burchik in the leak matched the address listed at that time on the website of the Mikhail Burchik I spoke with.

In St. Petersburg, I finally had a chance to compare notes with Andrei Soshnikov, the young investigative journalist at Moi Raion to whom Ludmila Savchuk leaked her documents. Soshnikov is an indefatigable reporter: During one investigation, he had gone so far as to create a 3-D computer model of a roadway in order to calculate how much asphalt had been stolen during its construction. He was one of the first journalists to expose the Internet Research Agency when he went undercover and got a job there in 2013. Since then, he had followed the agency’s Russian trolls as obsessively as I had been tracking their English counterparts.

I showed Soshnikov a YouTube video posted on Facebook by one of the trolls. The video was a slick animated infographic about the faults of the United States Secret Service. What had caught my attention was the narrator. He sounded just like the voice from the videos spread during the Columbian Chemicals and Atlanta shooting hoaxes: a man trying desperately to sound American but coming off as Australian instead.

Soshnikov instantly recognized the style of the animation. It was made, he said, by an outfit called Infosurfing, which posts pro-Kremlin infographics on Instagram and VKontakte. Soshnikov showed me how he used a service called Yomapic, which maps the locations of social-media users, to determine that photos posted to Infosurfing’s Instagram account came from 55 Savushkina. He had been monitoring all of the content posted from 55 Savushkina for weeks and had assembled a huge database of troll content.

He brought up Infosurfing’s YouTube channel, and as we scrolled down, I noticed several videos in the same style as the Secret Service animation. In fact, Infosurfing had posted the exact same video on its own account — except instead of the unfortunate Australian voice-over, it was narrated in Russian. It was the most tantalizing connection yet: It seemed as if the man in the hoax videos had worked for an outfit connected to the same building that housed the Internet Research Agency.

Still, no one had heard of any department that might have orchestrated the hoax. The English-language trolling team was an elite and secretive group. Marat Burkhardt, who worked in the forums department, was asked to try out for an English-language team but didn’t get the job. The only person I spoke with who worked in the English department was a woman named Katarina Aistova. A former hotel receptionist, she told me she joined the Internet Research Agency when it was in a previous, smaller office. I found her through the Anonymous International leak, which included emails she had sent to her bosses, reporting on the pro-Putin comments she left on sites like The Blaze and Politico. One of her assignments had been to write an essay from the point of view of an average American woman. “I live in such developed society, so that people have practically ceased to walk on foot,” she wrote. When I emailed Aistova, she wasn’t eager to talk. She told me she had been harassed by critics of the Internet Research Agency after her email appeared in the leak; some men had even come to her door. She would meet me for an interview, but only if she could bring her brother for protection. I agreed, and we met at an out-of-the-way Chinese restaurant.

Aistova and her brother made an unusual pair. She was a short young woman with midlength brown hair, dressed all in black: sweater, leggings, big wedge boots. She insisted on paying for my coffee. “You are a Russian guest,” she said. He, by contrast, was a hulking skinhead with arms full of Nazi-themed tattoos, most prominent among them a five-inch swastika on his left biceps. “My brother, he looks like a strongman,” Aistova said, giggling. He wore a black T-shirt emblazoned with the skull-and-crossbones insignia of the SS Totenkopf division, which administered the Nazi concentration camps. I asked him what his T-shirt meant. “Totenkopf,” he grunted. During the interview he sat across the table from Aistova and me, smiling silently behind his sunglasses.

Aistova said that she worked for the Internet Research Agency for a month and a half. The majority of her work was translating news articles from English to Russian. The news articles covered everything from Ukraine to traffic accidents. On a few occasions, her bosses asked her to leave comments on American news sites about Russia, but she said that they never told her what to say. She loves Russia, she told me. She truly believes that Putin is just trying to help the people of Eastern Ukraine, and that his actions are being unfairly spun by the Western media. “I was like, Hey, you guys, you are saying these bad things about Putin, but people are suffering.”

But she claimed to harbor no ill will toward the United States. She wants to visit New York City, she said, and see the locations from “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” one of her favorite films. “I don’t feel aggressive toward America. We’re the same people, we just speak different languages,” she said. After the interview, we shook hands outside the restaurant. “You seem like a journalist who will tell the truth,” she said. “I wish you luck on your story.”

On my last morning in St. Petersburg, I returned to 55 Savushkina. The clouds had lifted after a miserable week of snow and howling wind. At a few minutes before 10, my translator and I positioned ourselves on the sidewalk in front of the entrance, hoping to catch some of the trolls as they began the day shift. This was not a very well thought out strategy. Any employees arriving so close to the start of their shift didn’t have time to talk to a journalist even if they wanted to. A large van lurched to a halt in front of us and deposited a half-dozen young people, who hurried in the door before we had the chance to approach them. A bus stopped halfway down the block, and another gaggle of workers emerged. They waved off my translator’s inquiries with annoyed grunts or stone-faced silence. A young man smoking a cigarette said he didn’t work inside the building. He finished his cigarette and promptly went inside the building.

At 10 a.m. sharp, the flow of workers stopped. I decided we might as well try walking inside. I had read of other journalists who tried to enter the building, only to be kicked out immediately, so I entered with some trepidation. Two men in suits guarded the turnstiles. My translator and I approached a receptionist behind a desk and asked if we could speak with someone from Internet Research. (It dropped the “Agency” on moving to 55 Savushkina.) She informed us that Internet Research was no longer a tenant. “A couple of months ago, we had to say goodbye, because it was giving the entire building a bad reputation,” she said, matter-of-factly.

She pointed to a board that displayed a makeshift directory of the building’s current occupants. The names were printed out on small scraps of paper, and none of them were Internet Research. But I did recognize one: “FAN,” or Federal News Agency. I had read some news articles claiming that FAN was part of a network of pro-Kremlin news sites run out of 55 Savushkina, also funded by Evgeny Prigozhin. Former Internet Research Agency employees I had spoken to said they believed FAN was another wing of the same operation, under a different name. I asked to speak to someone from FAN. To my surprise, the receptionist picked up the phone, spoke into it for a few seconds and then informed us that Evgeny Zubarev, the editor in chief of FAN, would be right out to meet us.

Zubarev, who looked to be in his 50s, had close-cropped salt-and-pepper hair and a weary face. He greeted me with a handshake and invited me into his office. We made our way through the turnstiles and signed in with the guards, then took a brief walk down a long hallway to FAN’s two-room office on the first floor. It was unusually quiet for an online news operation that, according to Zubarev, had a staff of 40 people. The newsroom was equipped for a sizable team, with about a dozen identical black desktop computers sitting on identical brown laminate desks, but only two young reporters sat at them. The shades were drawn and the furniture looked just barely unpacked.

As we sat at Zubarev’s desk, I told him about the articles I’d read accusing FAN of being a Kremlin propaganda outfit. He shook his head in indignation. He turned to his computer and brought up FAN’s website, pointing to the masthead and the certificate number that showed FAN was an officially registered Russian mass-media organization. “FAN is a news agency,” he declared. It had stringers and reporters in Ukraine, and in many former Soviet states; they did original reporting, sometimes at great personal risk. Zubarev himself was a veteran journalist who covered the annexation of Crimea for the Russian news agency Rosbalt before joining FAN. But ever since reports linked him to the Internet Research Agency, he had faced questions about his integrity.

“We understand being in this building may discredit us, but we can’t afford to move at the moment,” Zubarev said with a sigh. “So we have to face the situation where reporters like you, Mr. Chen, come in here and ask us questions every day.”

Zubarev said he believed that he and FAN were victims of a smear campaign. I asked him who would do such a thing.

“Listen, that’s my position, not a confirmed fact,” he said. “It’s possible that there are some business interests, I don’t know. Maybe it’s an attack on our investors.” But when I asked who those investors were, he declined to comment. “I can’t discuss the identities of investors,” he said. “That’s in my contract.”

I left St. Petersburg on April 28. One day later, FAN published an article with the headline “What Does a New York Times Journalist Have in Common With a Nazi From St. Petersburg?” The story detailed a mysterious meeting in St. Petersburg between a New York Times journalist — me — and a neo-Nazi. Its lead image was a photo of a skinhead giving an enthusiastic Nazi salute. But it was not just any skinhead. It was the skinhead whom Katarina Aistova brought to our meeting and introduced to me as her brother. As I learned from reading the article, Aistova’s “brother” was in fact a notorious neo-Nazi named Alexei Maximov.

The article explained that Maximov, who goes by the nickname Fly, is a member of Totenkopf, a prominent skinhead group in St. Petersburg. He reportedly served nine years in prison for stabbing a man to death. Just a month before I met him, Maximov again made headlines when, during an investigation into beatings of immigrants around St. Petersburg, the police found weaponry and Nazi paraphernalia in his apartment.

The story made no mention of Katarina Aistova or the Internet Research Agency. Instead, the article claimed I met with Maximov because I wanted his help in creating a provocation against Russia. Maximov told FAN that I requested to meet him because I was “very keenly interested in sentiment among Russian nationalists.” He continued: “He evidently needed stories about how the murderous Kremlin regime persecutes free Russian people. It’s not the first time I’ve come across such requests on the part of Western journalists, but I’m not going to help them with this. Many want to see in Russian nationalists a ‘fifth column,’ which will function on orders from the West and sweep away the Kremlin.” Apparently I was trying to foment a mini-Euromaidan, right there in St. Petersburg.

The article was illustrated with photos of my meeting with Aistova and Maximov. One photo appears to have been shot surreptitiously through the restaurant window while we sat and talked. The point of view is such that Aistova is barely visible; indeed, at first glance, I seem to be having a friendly chat with a skinhead over a cup of coffee. Another photo, this one taken outside the restaurant, somehow makes me look deep in conversation with Maximov, even though I distinctly recall that Aistova was standing between us.

I had to admire the brazenness of the scheme. I remembered how, at the restaurant, Aistova had sat next to me so I had to twist around to talk to her, while Maximov sat silently across from us. Apparently they had arranged themselves so it could appear, from the right perspective, that I was meeting Maximov alone. I emailed Aistova to ask her to explain what happened. She responded only: “I would also like you to explain yourself and the situation!!” (A few weeks later, when I tried calling her by phone, she pretended I had the wrong number.)

Over the course of a few days, the sensational story circulated among a network of small pro-Kremlin blogs. In fact, the FAN story itself had been aggregated from another pro-Kremlin news site called People’s News, which Andrei Soshnikov, the Moi Raion journalist, has reported also operates out of 55 Savushkina. As it spread, it mutated to become even more alarming. One website suggested I was working for the C.I.A.; another, the National Security Agency. A YouTube channel called Russia Today — not the well-known state television channel but a knockoff — posted a slick video about the meeting, set to a pounding dubstep soundtrack. Disconcertingly, it included a photo of me leaving my hotel. The video currently has more than 60,000 views. Many of those views were a result of a familiar pattern of social-media promotion: Dozens of trolls on Twitter began tweeting links to the video using the hashtag #ВербовкаНацистов — “Recruitment of Nazis.” The hashtag trended on Russian Twitter.

After recovering from the initial shock, I began to track the campaign against me. I had practice, after all, from my months spent on the trail of the Internet Research Agency. I Googled the various Russian spellings of my name every hour to catch the latest posts as soon as they surfaced on LiveJournal and VKontakte. I searched Twitter for the URL of the YouTube video to catch every post.

A few days later, Soshnikov chatted with me on Skype. “Did you see an article about you on FAN?” he asked. “They know you are going to publish a loud article, so they are trying to make you look stupid in front of the Russian audience.”

I explained the setup, and as I did I began to feel a nagging paranoia. The more I explained, the more absurd my own words seemed — the more they seemed like exactly the sort of elaborate alibi a C.I.A. agent might concoct once his cover was blown. The trolls had done the only thing they knew how to do, but this time they had done it well. They had gotten into my head.

Correction: June 21, 2015
An article on June 7 about Russian Internet ‘‘trolls’’ referred incorrectly to the Internet platform Yandex. It was subjected to political pressure, but it was not brought under the control of Kremlin allies.

sexta-feira, 10 de julho de 2015

Especial: Trolls profissionais - Parte 2

Este é um artigo do Washigton Post sobre como as caixas de comentários estão a ser cada vez mais manipuladas. Retive a última frase que traduzo:

"Os Direitos Humanos, incluíndo a liberdade de expressão, referem-se a seres humanos reais e não a trolls anónimos."

Another reason to avoid reading the comments

By Anne Applebaum

If you are reading this article on the Internet, stop afterward and think about it. Then scroll to the bottom and read the commentary. If there isn’t any, try a Web site that allows comments, preferably one that is very political. Then recheck your views.

Chances are your thinking will have changed, especially if you have read a series of insulting, negative or mocking remarks — as so often you will. Once upon a time, it seemed as if the Internet would be a place of civilized and open debate; now, unedited forums often deteriorate to insult exchanges. Like it or not, this matters: Multiple experiments have shown that perceptions of an article, its writer or its subject can be profoundly shaped by anonymous online commentary, especially if it is harsh. One group of researchers found that rude comments “not only polarized readers, but they often changed a participant’s interpretation of the news story itself.” A digital analyst at Atlantic Media also discovered that people who read negative comments were more likely to judge that an article was of low quality and, regardless of the content, to doubt the truth of what it stated.

Some news organizations have responded by heavily curating comments. One Twitter campaigner, @AvoidComments, periodically reminds readers to ignore anonymous posters: “You wouldn’t listen to someone named Bonerman26 in real life. Don’t read the comments.” But none of that can prevent waves of insulting commentary from periodically washing over other parts of the Internet, infiltrating Facebook or overwhelming Twitter.

If all of this commentary were spontaneous, then this would simply be an interesting psychological phenomenon. But it is not. A friend who worked for a public relations company in Europe tells of companies that hire people to post, anonymously, positive words on behalf of their clients and negative words about rivals. Political parties of various kinds, in various countries, are rumored to do the same.

States have grown interested in joining the fray as well. Last year, Russian journalists infiltrated an organization in St. Petersburg that pays people to post at least 100 comments a day; an investigation earlier this year found that a well-connected businessman was paying Russian trolls to manage 10 Twitter accounts apiece with up to 2,000 followers. In the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Guardian of London admitted it was having trouble moderating what it called an “orchestrated campaign.” “Goodbye ‘Eddie,’ ” tweeted the Estonian president a few months ago, as he blocked yet another Twitter troll.


The Russian trolls have been well-documented. But others may be preparing to join them. An Iranian educational group, Tavaana, has lately found its Facebook page blocked thanks to what it suspects was the activity of Iranian trolls. Famously, the Chinese government monitors the Internet inside China, using hundreds of thousands of paid bloggers. It can’t be long before they work out how to do the same in English, or Korean, or other languages as well.

For democracies, this is a serious challenge. Online commentary subtly shapes what voters think and feel, even if it just raises the level of irritation, or gives readers the impression that certain views are “controversial,” or makes them wonder what the “mainstream” version of events is concealing. For the most part, the Russian trolls aren’t supplying classic propaganda, designed to trumpet the glories of Soviet agriculture. Instead, as journalists Peter Pomerantsev and Michael Weiss have written in a paper analyzing the new tactics of disinformation, their purpose is rather “to sow confusion via conspiracy theories and proliferate falsehoods.” In a world where traditional journalism is weak and information is plentiful, that isn’t very difficult to do.

But no Western government wants to “censor” the Internet, either, and objections will always be raised if government money is even spent studying this phenomenon. Perhaps, as Weiss and Pomerantsev have also argued, we therefore need civic organizations or charities that can identify deliberately false messages and bring them to public attention. Perhaps schools, as they once taught students about newspapers, now need to teach a new sort of etiquette: how to recognize an Internet troll, how to distinguish truth from state-sponsored fiction.

Sooner or later, we may also be forced to end Internet anonymity or to at least ensure that every online persona is linked back to a real person: Anyone who writes online should be as responsible for his words as if he were speaking them aloud. I know there are arguments in favor of anonymity, but too many people now abuse the privilege. Human rights, including the right to freedom of expression, should belong to real human beings and not to anonymous trolls.

Especial: Trolls profissionais - Parte 1

Há já algum tempo que sigo blogues de futebol em Portugal e sempre houve um fenómeno que me intrigou e que tem vindo a aumentar nos últimos anos, principalmente desde que BdC chegou à presidência do Sporting. Os blogues Sportinguistas que têm secção de comentários sem moderação estão infestados de lampiões. E, normalmente, o comportamento destes lampiões é o do típico troll: apenas querem criticar de forma acéfala, sistemática e tentando diminuir permanentemente o nosso clube. Além disso, obedecem a uma cartilha ideológica de total fé na direcção do orelhas.
A forma sistemática como esta gente comenta pôs-me a pensar se seria possível haver gente assim tão desocupada. E depois pus-me igualmente a pensar que nos jornais desportivos isto ainda é mais intenso com pessoal que passa certamente a centena de comentários por dia. E decidi investigar quais as práticas que existiam nesta área. Poderíamos considerar isto social media marketing? Cheguei à conclusão que não encaixava nas ferramentas clássicas desta área. Continuei a investigar e veio-me à cabeça a expressão troll profissional, que era o que de facto esta gente me parecia. Quando googlei a expressão em inglês obtive resultados interessantes, mas já lá vamos.

Um dos melhores exemplos do que acabo de descrever é a situação que encontramos no fórum de comentários do blogue O Artista do Dia. Este blogue é dos melhores da blogosfera leonina e a sua grande especialidade é desmontar a "realidade" que nos é apresentada, seja pela CS, seja pelos nossos rivais. Em quase todos os posts há comentários de 3 lampiões que estão em permanente modo troll: nuno martins, ricardo e pedro nuno. Este último penso que é um alter ego do ricardo, que teve de se refrear após um conjunto de comentários anti-patrióticos e racistas depois da derrota dos Sub-21 contra a Suécia. Como iremos ver mais à frente estes trolls precisam de manter a credibilidade a um nível mínimo nos fóruns não moderados, pois de outra forma podem vir a fazer com que o dono do blogue perca a paciência e passe a moderar os comentários acabando com o seu ganha pão. Tenho a profunda convicção que estes três trolls são perfis geridos por trolls profissionais. A actuação típica destes trolls caracteriza-se por:
1. São quase sempre os primeiros a comentar praticamente todos os posts;
2. A argumentação é sempre no sentido de criticar ou ridicularizar a actuação do Sporting;
3. Fazem-no de uma forma abertamente estúpida e confrontacional. Querem obter reacções para desgastar os comentadores reais e os leitores do blogue;
4. Tentam evitar as ofensas graves. Apesar da natureza do seu trabalho eles não podem matar a sua vaca leiteira. Precisam de ter os espaços de comentários abertos para continuarem a ter trabalho.

Podem ver aqui estes trolls profissionais em acção. Não fiz nenhuma pesquisa em especial. É apenas o último post.

Mas comecei a pensar que este é o perfil típico nos blogues do Sporting, mas estes trolls profissionais encontram-se em outros habitats. Nos jornais desportivos são mato. Aí mandam com tudo o que o moderador permite (que é muito) para atingir os objectivos. Estão também presentes nos blogues benfiquistas, e aí são bastante mais activos, lançando discussões com eles próprios, através de vários perfis falsos de forma a dar força à visão vigente (do orelhas) vingar, criticando qualquer um que se oponha a essa mesma visão e perseguindo de forma impiedosa todo o tipo de oposição ao "regime".

Há ainda mais um tipo de troll profissional que é o que se faz passar por adepto de outro clube. Este é menos frequente mas aparece com alguma frequência no blogue A Tasca do Cherba. O fenómeno das melancias é relativamente frequente por lá, mas dura pouco, pois há um grande controlo dos perfis dos comentadores.

Mas porque é que alguém se dá ao trabalho de pagar a esta gente? Obviamente estes trolls são uma das ferramentas de propaganda da actual direcção do benfica. O objectivo é, nos meios generalistas, dar a sensação de que o benfica fala a uma só voz, fala "mais alto" que os outros, que a maioria dos adeptos está com a direcção. Nos blogues lampiões a ideia é mostrar que pensam todos da mesma maneira, que quem pensa de forma contrária será obliterado, aproveitando para ao mesmo tempo lançar a dúvida sobre os pontos de vista de quem é crítico, tentando alterar esses mesmos pontos de vista. Nos adversários o objectivo é desgastar, lançar a dúvida, juntar os críticos e tentar ao máximo baixar a moral dos adversários.

Muitos dos que me lêem neste momento devem estar a pensar: "Olha mais um maluquinho com a mania das teorias de conspiração! O orelhas era incapaz de conseguir engendrar um esquema destes!" Claro que era, mas o benfica tem do seu lado o josé eduardo moniz, grande expert de media e que está totalmente por dentro de tudo o que se faz de mais avançado (e sujo) nessa área. Sempre o vi como um pequeno génio do mal que sempre soube levar a sua água ao moinho. Estou convicto que a responsabilidade de toda a estratégia de comunicação lampiã é dele, incluindo a utilização desta ferramenta. Se pensarmos bem, a vermelhização dos media agudizou-se de sobremaneira desde que ele se tornou vice-presidente do benfica. 

Tal como mencionei antes quando googlei a expressão inglesa professional trolls fi-lo achando que nada iria aparecer, mas tal não aconteceu. Encontrei vários artigos sobre o assunto que irei partilhar nos próximos posts em versão integral original de forma a que este post não fique demasiado extenso. No entanto deixo já os links para quem quiser ir lendo:

Another reason to avoid reading the comments - Uma visão interessante do problema dos trolls profissionais e como eles estão a destruir o debate online

The Agency - Uma visão de como funciona a maior agência de trolls profissionais russas, que desempenhou um papel de grande relevo na crise da Ucrânia

One Professional Russian Troll Tells All - Também podia ser confissões de um ricardo, pedro nuno ou nuno martins

Em resumo, quando lerem a caixa dos comentários façam-no com a certeza que há ali muito "conteúdo" fabricado.

SL

sexta-feira, 3 de julho de 2015

Estruturas e famílias

Ao ver ontem as notícias de que o antero henrique estava a ser investigado por crimes de extorsão, tráfico de armas, tráfico de droga, tentativas de homicídio e ofensas corporais e pelas suas ligações à SPDE. Esta empresa é uma das responsáveis da segurança no estádio do dragão e pela segurança pessoal da direcção do porto. Aqui os podemos ver em acção:


De referir que o gorila que empurra o polícia, impunemente diga-se de passagem, é director da SPDE e foi ontem detido no âmbito da operação Fénix. Chama-se eduardo silva.

Ao ler sobre este assunto no Leoninamente (blogue escrito pelo grande Álamo, um Sportinguista de grande cepa!) deparei-me com esta frase de antero henrique: "... temos uma estrutura que funciona de tal forma que nos permite ter rapidamente acesso a informações. Só assim conseguimos chegar primeiro do que os outros". Além de ficarmos agora perceber que mais rápido apenas quer dizer que são melhores a coagir (não é danilo?), chamou-me à atenção uma palavra: estrutura. Esta palavra hoje parece ter o mesmo significado que a palavra família tinha na extraordinária trilogia do Francis Ford Coppola. Também me lembro que a família Corleone (a maior e mais poderosa da trilogia) conseguia passar entre os pingos da chuva no que aos casos de polícia dizia respeito, tudo graças à sua... estrutura!

O critério editorial do jornal a bola sobre este tipo de assuntos é "curioso". Vejamos a capa do jornal hoje e de há exactamente quatro meses quando ppc e mustafá foram presos:



ppc era um ex-vice do Sporting. Antero Henrique é um actual vice do porto. Parecem-me ter, no mínimo, a mesma posição da hierarquia do futebol português. No entanto, a importância que dá ao assunto é mínima. Nos outros jornais temos de fazer justiça pois as chamadas de capa foram semelhantes, isto apesar de o jogo não ter feito nenhuma chamada de capa hoje ou no dia 3 de março mas ter feito uma chamada de capa no dia 4 de março. Vou aguardar até amanhã (sentado). Honra ao cm que dá o mesmo destaque a ambos os escândalos, fazendo de ambos os casos a principal chamada de capa. Só gostava ver se o critério "jornalístico" seria o mesmo se fosse um escândalo da família, desculpem, estrutura vermelha.

SL

quinta-feira, 2 de julho de 2015

Mais um que não sabe andar nas redes sociais

Porque ser uma virgem ofendida também faz parte da nova cartilha lampiónica (um dia vou escrever sobre isto!):


 

Acho piada este criado vermelho se queira apresentar como isento. Quanto muito pode apresentar-se como um asno que se esquece que as redes sociais são públicas e que o que lá escrevemos pode ser público se não tivermos cuidado.

E aqui fica a prova que os da mesma espécie sabem sempre reconhecer-se (o que liga fala em "lampiónico" mas dá para perceber a ideia):



Comunicação social isenta? O que é isso? Sempre fui a favor do modelo espanhol onde os jornalistas desportivos e políticos são abertamente de um clube ou partido. Mas esse modelo tem um problema... Dá menos dinheiro a esta corja de lambe-cús que se chama cs. Se eles se mantiveram como supostamente isentos não podem ir comer da mão dos donos, ou até podem, mas comem menos. O segredo da isenção vale dinheiro, porque uma opinião "isenta" tem maior capacidade de influência junto da opinião pública.

SL

PS: Obrigado ao Captomente e ao Mestre de Cerimónias pelos audiovisuais

Carrega rennie!

rui pedro brás o ex-biógrafo ou biógrafo falhado (como preferirem) de figuras como quique flores, ricardinho e autor do livro "o ninho da águia", depois de uma carreira merecidamente falhada no mundo da escrita, dedicou-se ao comentário desportivo.

O blogue Com quem é que joga o Sporting fez um best of da azia do comentadeiro assalariado vermelho durante a apresentação de Jorge Jesus na tvi24:



Parece que ao ser confrontado com a sua própria (e triste) figura o serviçal vermelho ficou sensível nas partes traseiras e pôs um post no fb:


Até fui ver o resto da apresentação só para ver qual era o nível de azia do bicho e só tenho a dizer: CARREGA RENNIE! (em lampiónico que é para ele perceber melhor). Toda a transmissão mostrou  quão assados estão os entrefolhos do rpb e o captomente até deixo escapar muitos momentos de refluxo gástrico e ardor rectal. Além disso, o rpb não anda a comentar desde ontem (embora pareça pelo que se segue). Ainda há poucos dias vejam o que ele tinha a dizer sobre a expulsão de sócio do godinho lopes:



Para o rpb construir um estádio com 80 milhões de desvio de orçamento é a mesma coisa que vender o Carriço por 700 mil euros, o arias por 670 mil euros ou comprar o shikabala por 180 mil. Mas espera... o Carriço foi vendido pelo godinho lopes. Epá o ódio é tanto que nem faz a pesquisa como deve ser. Ou isso ou é má fé do vassalo vermelho que precisava de engordar a acusação, nem que fosse artificialmente. E já agora, o buraco de 115 milhões de euros que o godinho lopes deixou como legado, são boa gestão comparados com a inversão feita pela actual direcção da ruína financeira para onde o Sporting avançava à conta da gestão gl? Além disso, este lacaio vermelho nem conhece os motivos da expulsão. Os mesmos são, por agora, confidenciais, para godinho lopes poder apresentar a sua defesa sobre os mesmos. Mas o que interessa é achincalhar o Sporting, não é rpb?

SL

Ps: A pergunta que se coloca é quanto levará o rpb à hora? Será à hora ou até o servicinho estar completo (como quem diz, por programa... de televisão)



Parabéns ao melhor clube do mundo!

Atrasados, mas ontem não deu mesmo para escrever nada. Só o melhor clube do mundo é que dá uma prenda um sócio no dia em que faz anos! Recebi hoje o meu novo cartão de sócio. Baixei 2000 números, mas ainda não foi desta que baixei dos 40.000. É pena que nunca tenha tido disponibilidade financeira para recuperar o meu primeiro número. Estaria agora com 25 anos de sócio em vez dos 15 que vou fazer. Ter crescido numa casa de benfiquistas obrigava-me a pagar as quotas do meu bolso e só me fiz sócio com 15 anos. mas houve um período quando entrei para a faculdade em que o dinheiro não dava para tudo e aí deixei de pagar quotas. Só quando comecei a trabalhar voltei a fazer sócio e fiquei com esta numeração de que muito me orgulho

Tenha eu saúde para chegar aos 50 anos de sócio. Era muito bom sinal!!!

SL