A war in which intellligence operations are conducted via social media - and which targeted forces may believe - suggests how central technology is now to conducting military operations. JL
Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai reports in Motherboard:
The Security Service of Ukraine (SSU) announced that it caught and disrupted a “special information operation” designed to “destabilize moral and psychological state of Ukrainian security forces” (by) running a bot farm that sent 5,000 text messages to local police and military members asking them to surrender and defect. Judging from the screenshot of the message, the campaign was conducted on WhatsApp. “[SSU] detained a hacker who provided the occupiers mobile connection in Ukraine.”Ukraine’s intelligence service accused Russia of running a bot farm that sent around 5,000 text messages to local police and military members asking them to surrender and defect.
On Thursday, the Security Service of Ukraine (SSU) announced that it caught and disrupted the “special information operation” that was designed to “destabilize moral and psychological state of Ukrainian security forces.”
The message, according to the press release, said: “The outcome of events is predetermined! Be prudent and refuse to support nationalism and leaders of the country who discredited themselves and already fled the capital!!!”
Judging from the screenshot of the message published by the SSU it appears like the campaign was conducted on WhatsApp. The SSU did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
WhatsApp did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The SSU said that it “quickly discovered and neutralized” the operation but “the enemy” was able to send 5,000 messages before that happened. According to the agency, the farm was run in an apartment in Dnipropetrovsk, a city in central Ukraine, and “remotely controlled from Russia.”
During the invasion of Ukraine, Russia has conducted relatively stealthy malware attacks as well as disinformation and psychological operations. In March, the SSU announced that it had detained a “hacker” that was helping Russian troops route calls, place anonymous phone calls to invaders, send messages to Ukrainian security forces asking them to surrender, and apparently a similar operation to the one disrupted Thursday.
“[SSU] detained a hacker who provided the occupiers mobile connection in Ukraine,” the SSU wrote in its announcement at the time.
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