COP28: on Twitter, the offensive of fake profiles of pro-climate and pro-Emirates “blonde”

by time news

2023-06-15 01:54:34

‘Brianna’, ‘Caitlin’, ‘Emma’, ‘Chloe’ and ‘Ben’ tweet about climate protection actions allegedly taken by the UAE and Sultan Al Jaber, the next COP president and leader of an oil giant. However, these five people do not exist. These are fake profiles identified by researchers as “American blondes”.

Impossible to find any trace of their existence elsewhere online, and their photos were probably generated with artificial intelligence. All relay similar messages and were created in a few hours in August 2022, according to an analysis carried out by Climate Action Against Disinformation (CAAD), which brings together several non-governmental organizations.

The specialists interviewed identified several dozen accounts involved in pro-Emirates offensives: this is the principle of “astroturfing”, a technique aimed at influencing opinion on social networks. A COP28 spokesperson said the accounts were “generated by unknown outside actors unrelated to COP28” and were “clearly designed to discredit COP28 and climate talks”.

COP28 also said it reported these accounts to Twitter, and asked the platform to take “immediate action to end these activities”. Many accounts appear to have since been suspended.

Greenwashing

Political representatives from the United States and Europe had called on Sultan Al Jaber to give up his role as president of COP28, believing that as the head of the Emirati national oil company ADNOC, he was in a position of conflict of interest.

When Romain Ioualalen of the NGO Oil Change International expressed concern on Twitter that COP28 would “slow down the transition away from fossil fuels”, “Caitlin”, a “lawyer” based in Dubai, replied that Sultan Al Jaber could on the contrary be “a game-changer”, while “Emma”, an “ecologist”, praised her “passion for climate action”.

After the Center for Climate Reporting (CCR) accused Al Jaber’s entourage of editing pages on Wikipedia to downplay his role as head of ADNOC, accounts claiming to be non-Emirati youth with climate change awareness also counter-attacked, explained the director of the CCR, Lawrence Carter. One of their profile pictures watermarked the address of an online fake face generator and several others came from image banks.

Hundreds of accounts involved

According to Diogo Pacheco, a computer science researcher at the University of Exeter, who reviewed several accounts, they appeared to be “inauthentic”. He also noted that some had changed their username or bio after being reported. “It would be very unusual for real people to create and use this type of fake profile photos,” said Katharina Kleinen von Koenigsloew, professor of communication sciences at the University of Hamburg.

CAAD described a “coordinated effort” involving at least 28 accounts promoting the Gulf country and featuring “suspicious patterns” of tweets. Online disinformation researcher Marc Owen Jones identified 93 accounts involved in the campaign, some of which were created more than two years ago. They mainly focused on giving visibility to the COP28 account, he explained.

“Usually, in these kinds of operations, it is a company specialized in public relations that disseminates the messages,” added Marc Owen Jones, from Hamad Bin Khalifa University in Qatar, a rival country of the United Arab Emirates. “But it’s very difficult to get proof of that,” he added.

Prior to billionaire Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter last year, the platform said it had removed accounts linked to ‘state-backed information operations’ in Middle Eastern countries, including the Arab Emirates. United. Regarding accounts tweeting about COP28, Jamie Henn, Group Director of the NGO Fossil Free Media, said that in more than a decade of monitoring the UN climate negotiations, he had “never seen a campaign disinformation of such magnitude.

#COP28 #Twitter #offensive #fake #profiles #proclimate #proEmirates #blonde

You may also like

Leave a Comment