Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and Ambivalence

On 24 March 2018, Tumblr terminated 84 user accounts identified as being “linked to Internet Research Agency or IRA (a group closely tied to the Russian government) posing as members of the Tumblr community.” In response, Tumblr deleted the blogs and accounts of these 84 users but allowed reblogs of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Indira Neill Hoch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-10-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120961783
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author Indira Neill Hoch
author_facet Indira Neill Hoch
author_sort Indira Neill Hoch
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description On 24 March 2018, Tumblr terminated 84 user accounts identified as being “linked to Internet Research Agency or IRA (a group closely tied to the Russian government) posing as members of the Tumblr community.” In response, Tumblr deleted the blogs and accounts of these 84 users but allowed reblogs of their posts to continue to circulate openly on the platform. Through a case study of posts originating with one IRA account, Lagonegirl, and qualitative interviews with 13 Tumblr users, this article considers the platform conventions and social norms that were utilized by the Lagonegirl account to facilitate its distribution of disinformation. Posing as a Black woman concerned with social justice but also sharing humorous posts that resonated with Millennials, Lagonegirl’s performance shows overlap with existing work on “Left Troll” IRA Twitter accounts while demonstrating platform specificity in the construction of posts.
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spelling doaj.art-92584ab7777749d8956187f55a766d242022-12-21T23:42:10ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512020-10-01610.1177/2056305120961783Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and AmbivalenceIndira Neill HochOn 24 March 2018, Tumblr terminated 84 user accounts identified as being “linked to Internet Research Agency or IRA (a group closely tied to the Russian government) posing as members of the Tumblr community.” In response, Tumblr deleted the blogs and accounts of these 84 users but allowed reblogs of their posts to continue to circulate openly on the platform. Through a case study of posts originating with one IRA account, Lagonegirl, and qualitative interviews with 13 Tumblr users, this article considers the platform conventions and social norms that were utilized by the Lagonegirl account to facilitate its distribution of disinformation. Posing as a Black woman concerned with social justice but also sharing humorous posts that resonated with Millennials, Lagonegirl’s performance shows overlap with existing work on “Left Troll” IRA Twitter accounts while demonstrating platform specificity in the construction of posts.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120961783
spellingShingle Indira Neill Hoch
Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and Ambivalence
Social Media + Society
title Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and Ambivalence
title_full Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and Ambivalence
title_fullStr Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and Ambivalence
title_full_unstemmed Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and Ambivalence
title_short Russian Internet Research Agency Disinformation Activities on Tumblr: Identity, Privacy, and Ambivalence
title_sort russian internet research agency disinformation activities on tumblr identity privacy and ambivalence
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120961783
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