** Guardian - 11/23/25 - Many prominent Maga personalities on X are based outside US, new tool reveals + 11/21/25 - Hundreds of English-language websites link to pro-Kremlin propaganda

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Buzz Sawyer

unread,
Nov 23, 2025, 10:15:08 PM (10 days ago) Nov 23
to 4 - Buzz Gmail Group

(1) an explanation from Twitter re account location info is below:
X Adds Account Transparency Panel with Origin and Change Details
Last updated 4 minutes ago
The feature appeared quietly around November 21. Tap 'Date joined' on any profile, and an 'About this account' panel opens with IP-based join location, verification info, username change counts up to 98 or more, and app store region. People have used it to examine political accounts, spotting mismatches like pro-Trump profiles from Nigeria or North Africa alongside anti-Israel and left-leaning ones from Canada or Austria. It supports X's efforts against bots without listing past usernames or confirming intent, blending praise for openness with privacy concerns.
This story is a summary of posts on X and may evolve over time. Grok can make mistakes, verify its outputs.


(2) The related report mentioned in the second article is at link below:
https://www.isdglobal.org/digital_dispatches/link-by-link-hundreds-of-webpages-cite-pro-russia-pravda-network/






Sun 23 Nov 2025

Many prominent Maga personalities on X are based outside US, new tool reveals

Users posing as rightwing Americans are operating internationally, per the platform’s transparency feature

Many of the most influential personalities in the “Make America great again” (Maga) movement on X are based outside of the US, including Russia, Nigeria and India, a new transparency feature on the social media site has revealed.

The new tool, called “about this account,” became available on Friday to users of the Elon Musk-owned platform. It allows anyone to see where an account is located, when it joined the platform, how often its username has been changed, and how the X app was downloaded.

As soon as the update was rolled out, users found numerous Maga and rightwing influencers who presented themselves as patriotic Americans were operating from other countries.

“This is easily one of the greatest days on this platform,” wrote liberal influencer Harry Sisson. “Seeing all of these MAGA accounts get exposed as foreign actors trying to destroy the United States is a complete vindication of Democrats, like myself and many on here, who have been warning about this.”


The account MAGANationX, with nearly 400,000 followers and a bio reading “Patriot Voice for We The People”, is actually operated from eastern Europe, according to the Daily Beast. Another popular profile, IvankaNews, an Ivanka Trump fan account with around one million followers that frequently posts about illegal immigration, Islam and support for Trump, was revealed to be based in Nigeria.

Another user also uncovered several additional cases. Dark Maga, a smaller account with roughly 15,000 followers, is run from Thailand. MAGA Scope, which has more than 51,000 followers, operates out of Nigeria, while MAGA Beacon is based in south Asia.

Users on Reddit also joined the exposé effort, posting examples of accounts that appeared to misrepresent their origins. One Reddit user posted a screenshot of a woman who claimed to live in Texas but instead appeared to be located in Russia, though as of Sunday, the user named in the post appears to have a US location. Many in the comments posted other examples they found.

Bots spreading misinformation and propaganda has been a long-running problem on Twitter, a problem that has been significantly exacerbated since Musk bought it in October 2022 and then renamed it X. Its AI chatbot, Grok, has also been found to frequently make and amplify false claims.



Hundreds of English-language websites link to pro-Kremlin propaganda

Thinktank says internet flooded with disinformation by Russia-aligned Pravda network, which many websites treat as credible

Fri 21 Nov 2025 07.09 EST

Hundreds of English-language websites – from mainstream news outlets to fringe blogs – are linking to articles from a pro-Kremlin network flooding the internet with disinformation, according to a study released by a London-based thinktank.

The study by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD) found that in more than 80% of citations it analysed, the websites treated the network as a credible source, legitimising its narratives and increasing its visibility. The disinformation operation – known as the Pravda network – was identified by the French government last year.

The ISD cautioned that by linking to articles in the network, the websites were inadvertently increasing the likelihood of search engines and large language models (LLMs) surfacing the pages, even in cases where the linking sites were disputing the Pravda network as a source. 

Security experts have expressed fears in recent months that Russia is trying to seed chatbots such as ChatGPT and Gemini with pro-Russia narratives by feeding them large volumes of disinformation, a process called “LLM grooming”.

The Pravda network has been around since 2014, but researchers tracking its output say the number of articles it churns out has surged this year. Up to 23,000 articles a day were published in May, up from approximately 6,000 daily articles in 2024.

The network now appears to be aiming for a global audience, targeting countries across Asia and Africa as well as Europe.

“The Pravda network has been expanding pretty rapidly over the past year,” said Nina Jankowicz, a disinformation expert who spoke to the UK parliament earlier this week on efforts to undermine democracy. “They are targeting a lot of different languages. They want to have a presence across a bunch of different countries.”

It is unclear what led to this increase, but some disinformation experts believe it was an effort to push large amounts of pro-Russia content into the training datasets of AI models, which use massive amounts of data during their training and scrape content from the entire internet.

Studies from earlier this year showed that popular chatbots at times repeated Russian disinformation in response to certain queries – suggesting, for example, that the US was building a bioweapon in Ukraine or the French were supplying mercenaries to Kyiv.

Researchers at the ISD say that, whether or not LLMs have been poisoned, their findings indicate the Pravda network’s high-volume strategy is working.

“More than any other Russia-aligned operation, the Pravda network is playing a numbers game,” said Joseph Bodnar, a senior researcher at the ISD. “They’ve saturated the internet ecosystem enough to get in front of real people who are doing research on Russia-related issues.

The ISD found that 40% of the Pravda network content picked up by mainstream websites appeared to be related to Russia’s war in Ukraine. A vast amount, however, concerned other topics: US domestic policy, for example, or the fortunes of Elon Musk. As well as surfacing on news websites, the Pravda articles have also appeared on social media.

“This happened to a lot of different reputable sources and a lot less reputable sources too, like people from across the ideological spectrum. It really touched every part of the web that we could find,” said Bodnar.

Jankowicz warned that the Pravda network’s increasing legitimacy might allow it to “usurp coverage” on Ukraine as media outlets increasingly shift their coverage elsewhere.

“There’s a bit less news about Ukraine. And if they can get in there and fill that gap really soon, that means that the Russian viewpoint is the one that’s going to get out there quickly and be cited in large language models.”

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages