On Tuesday, The Guardian posted an article about the US military pouring millions into researching how to become a Twitter-user-influencing, propaganda-spewing machine.
The program in question is known as Social Media in Strategic Communication (SMISC).
SMISC, which was announced in 2011, has been regarded as the means by which the US military can both detect and conduct propaganda campaigns via social media.
While DARPA's social media experiments well might have avoided breaking any law by using only publicly available data, some of its studies are sure to make people uncomfortable.
For example, some of the SMISC research has focused on the Occupy Wall Street protests and those in the Middle East, while other projects have analysed online memes and tweets from celebrities including Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga (described as "the most popular elite user on Twitter", according to The Guardian.
The manager of SMISC, Dr. Rand Waltzman, said in a post that understanding social media is just part of DARPA's "mission of preventing strategic surprise."
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 11 2014, @03:56PM
Your using illogical off topic ad hominem attacks and avoiding questions put to you constantly: How exactly do you propose to control sock puppets (you can't, and you obviously use them yourself) http://soylentnews.org/comments.pl?sid=2836&cid=67595 [soylentnews.org] We SEE you/You have revealed yourself, sock puppeteer. You have single handedly annihilated your own site resisting the single thing that would reveal sock puppet use via patterns (screaming that you use sock puppets yourself, obviously. Why else resist it? It works on UBB boards, but "no, can't have that here" and WHY is quite obvious. You abuse "the downmod truncheon in lieu of conversation" yourself, massively).