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Vikings spoil Mitch Trubisky’s debut on late field goal

October 10, 2017 by  
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CHICAGO — Rookie quarterback Mitchell Trubisky got his chance to start in Chicago. The second-overall pick showed signs of promise in the Bears’ 20-17 loss to the Minnesota Vikings. Kai Forbath’s 26-yard field goal in the closing seconds of the game lifted the Vikings to victory after Case Keenum replaced Sam Bradford at quarterback in the second quarter.

Here’s what we learned during Monday night’s game:

1. Mitchell Trubisky’s first career start was a mixed bag.

The Good: Trubisky displayed the pinpoint accuracy he showed this preseason was no fluke. When the rookie rolls out and throws on the run, it’s a thing of beauty. The Bears utilized the rookie’s athleticism, getting him out of the pocket often and simplifying his reads. Trubisky’s athleticism allowed the Bears to diversify the playbook, utilizing more stretch runs and pocket movement. The rookie was at his best getting the ball out of his hands quickly. He made a receiver corps of second-fiddles nearly serviceable.

The Not So Good: As with most rookies, however, Trubisky struggled with consistency against Mike Zimmer’s defense. He missed a blitz call early and fumbled on a sack leading the Vikings first points of the game. Trubisky is a marvel when the play breaks down, but missed a few throws in the pocket, and didn’t stretch the field much at all. Through three quarters he completed just 10 of 21 passes for 102 yards and couldn’t put points on the board in the first half despite his first four drives getting into Vikings’ territory (all four ending in punts). Trubisky’s teammates didn’t help the rookie out much, picking up several costly penalties early. His offensive line — particularly tackle Charles Leno — also allowed the Vikings to get consistent pressure in the rookie’s face. Trubisky’s first career TD pass came on a would-be interception tipped into Zack Miller’s hands on a rollout. It was a fitting first touchdown for the rookie. Trubisky made a brutal error when a short pass intended for Miller landed him his first interception with almost two minutes left in the game.


To boil it down: Trubisky owns tremendous upside and displayed why he’s a clear upgrade on Mike Glennon, but has several strides to make in his development.

2. Did somebody swap bodies with John Fox? The normally conservative coach gave the thumbs up on a beautiful fake punt in the fourth quarter that resulted in Chicago’s first touchdown of the game and kept the Bears in the contest. Later the Bears’ offense unfurled a marvelous double pitch option two-point conversion to tie the game at 17. If Trubisky unleased the fun in Fox, we’re all the better for it.

3. Sam Bradford’s return lasted fewer than two quarters. After missing the past three games with a knee injury, the wobbly quarterback was yanked from the game on the final drive of the first half in favor of Case Keenum. Bradford didn’t look right from the get-go. The veteran signal-caller was out of sync with his receivers and made poor decisions, including sitting forever in the end zone and taking a safety. More than anything Bradford didn’t look healthy at all and was a sitting duck in the pocket (four sacks). He was a danger to himself and his team on the field. Zimmer had no choice but to pull the starter. Bradford finished 5-of-11 passing for 36 yards.

4. The Vikings offense put up 34 total yards on 26 plays with Bradford under center. When Case Keenum took over, the Vikings offense found life. After a token drive to end the half, Keenum remained in to start the third quarter and led a 13-play, 75-yard drive, culminating on a rollout TD toss across his body to tight end Kyle Rudolph. Keenum led back-to-back touchdown drives to open the second half. With Keenum able to dodge rushers, the Vikings offense simply ran better with the backup under center. He finished 17-for-21 passing for 140 yards and a TD. With Bradford clearly still hobbled, Keenum playing solid, and Teddy Bridgewater on a path to possibly return, the Vikings QB situation remains a murky jumble.


5. The rush to replace Dalvin Cook has begun. Latavius Murray earned the start and got most of the early carries as the Vikings offense struggled. Then Jerick McKinnon busted out, shouldering Minnesota’s offense. The dual-threat back ripped off a 58-yard TD run in the second half, totaled 16 carries for 95 yards and was the Vikings leading receiver with six receptions for 51 yards. McKinnon accounted for 146 of the Vikings 300 total yards. After sitting behind Adrian Peterson, then being buried behind the dynamic rookie to start the season, McKinnon deserves a shot at the lead role. He’s a closer representation to the back the Vikings offense needs than the plodding Murray.

6. The Vikings defense continues to smother opposing offenses. Everson Griffen destroyed Bears blockers all game. The Bears couldn’t run the ball early thanks to stout run defense up the gut. The backend made life difficult for Trubisky. Harrison Smith was thrown at four times, per Pro Football Focus, giving up just one catch for minus 3 yards and earned the game-winning interception. The rookie quarterback didn’t even test Xavier Rhodes, who wasn’t targeted at all for the first time in his career, per PFF. Zimmer’s defense once again proved it can carry an uneven offense to a victory.

7. Speaking of defensive efforts, Bears pass rusher Leonard Floyd played his best game as a pro, earning six tackles, four for loss, two sacks and three QB hits. Chicago desperately needs the first-round pick to live up to his talent. Akiem Hicks also continued his spectacular season, earning two sacks and three tackles for loss. Hicks’ performance this season will likely fly under the radar because he’s not a big name and plays on a losing team, but he’s been fantastic thus far.

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How Russia Harvested American Rage to Reshape US Politics

October 10, 2017 by  
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“This is cultural hacking,” said Jonathan Albright, research director at Columbia University’s Tow Center for Digital Journalism. “They are using systems that were already set up by these platforms to increase engagement. They’re feeding outrage — and it’s easy to do, because outrage and emotion is how people share.”

All of the pages were shut down by Facebook in recent weeks, as the company conducts an internal review of Russian penetration of its social network. But content and engagement metrics for hundreds of posts were captured by CrowdTangle, a common social analytics tool, and gathered by Mr. Albright.

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Videos made by an American YouTube channel called CleanTV.com were reposted by a Russia-linked Facebook page called Secured Borders.

One Russian Facebook page, the United Muslims of America, frequently posted content highlighting discrimination against Muslims. In June 2016, it posted a video originally made by Waqas Shah, 23, an online video creator from Staten Island. In the video, Mr. Shah dressed in a thobe, a traditional ankle-length gown worn by Arab men, walked through New York’s Union Square, where he is shoved and harassed by another actor pretending to be a bully to see how bystanders react.

The video ends with Mr. Shah pointing out New York’s hypocrisy: The city claims to be a “melting pot,” but no one intervened while he was getting harassed. Mr. Shah’s original video, posted on YouTube in June 2016, was a viral hit that attracted more than three million views. A week after he posted it, United Muslims of America copied the video to its group page without the original YouTube link, a process known as ripping. There, Mr. Shah’s video become the Russian page’s most popular post, earning more than 150,000 interactions.

Mr. Shah said when he noticed the ripped video, he wrote to the administrator of the United Muslims account, asking them to add the link to his original YouTube video. His main concern, Mr. Shah said, was that the page was stealing his views. Told that his video had been used by Russian accounts to sow division in the United States, Mr. Shah said there wasn’t anything he could do about it.

“There are always going to be people who manipulate things to their agenda,” he said.

When Being Patriotic posted a brief message last year rallying Americans against proposals to expand refugee settlements in the United States, it was liked, shared or otherwise engaged with by more than 750,000 Facebook users. Eventually, it came across the feed of Len Swanson, 64, a Republican activist from Houston and an avid Trump supporter.

Mr. Swanson, who frequently posts long commentaries on LinkedIn and Facebook, then used the message and photo to open one of his own posts, attacking Hillary Clinton and the Democrats. The message Mr. Swanson borrowed also appears on a conservative meme website, with a photo that at least one newspaper has credited to the United States Navy.

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“I usually publish an article several times a week, to keep driving the narrative,” Mr. Swanson said in an interview. He was not bothered, he said, by becoming an unwitting cog in the Russian propaganda machine. “You know we do the same damn thing over there,” Mr. Swanson said. “What do you think — we’re saints?”

In early 2016, Being Patriotic copied and pasted a story from the conspiracy site InfoWars, saying that federal employees had taken “land from private property owners at pennies on the dollar.” The Russian page added some original text: “The nation can’t trust the federal government anymore. What a disgrace!”

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A Russia-linked Facebook page, Being Patriotic, posted a version of a message rallying Americans against proposals to expand refugee settlements in the United States. The message was reposted by American Facebook users.

This past March, another of the Russian pages, Secured Borders, reposted a video that it attributed to Conservative Tribune, part of the conservative and pro-Trump sites run by Patrick Brown. The video, which falsely claims that Michigan allows Muslim immigrants to collect welfare checks and other benefits for four wives, originated on a YouTube channel called CleanTV.com. The Facebook post has been removed, but a version remains up on the meme site Me.Me.

Mr. Brown did not respond to an email seeking comment. But Gerald McGlothlin, the president of CleanTV — and a contributor to other sites run by Mr. Brown — confirmed in an email that his company had created the original YouTube video.

The Blacktivist Facebook page appears to have specialized in passionate denunciations of the criminal justice system and viral videos of police violence, many of them gathered from Facebook and YouTube. In May, Blacktivist also posted a message drawn from news stories about the death of Jayson Negron, a teenager in Bridgeport, Conn., during a confrontation with police. Such posts soon found an authentic audience: The Negron post was reposted by a verified Facebook account belonging to Black Lives Matter Chicago, according to a cached copy.

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As lawmakers debate tighter regulation for companies like Facebook, the trail of Russian digital bread crumbs underscores how difficult it will be to purge social media networks of foreign influence, or even to hamper the covert propaganda campaigns carried out on social platforms by Russia, China and other countries.

Copying other people’s content without proper attribution can be a violation of the social networks’ rules. But the content itself — the videos, posts and Instagram memes borrowed and shared on the Russian pages — are not explicitly violent or discriminatory, so they do not violate the rules of those services. Instead, they are precisely the type of engaging content these platforms are hungry for.

The Russian campaign also appears to have been tailored to exploit the companies’ own strategies for keeping users engaged. Facebook, for example, pushed people to interact more in Groups like the ones set up by the Russians, where users can “share their common interests and express their opinion” around a common cause. LinkedIn, the professional social network owned by Microsoft, is geared toward encouraging users like Mr. Swanson to create articles and other content.

“The strategies are no mystery,” said Michael Strangelove, a lecturer on internet culture at the University of Ottawa. “Foreign powers are playing within the rules of the game that we wrote.”

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Facebook has now shuttered the pages linked to Russia. The social network, whose Los Angeles offices are shown here, is conducting an internal review.

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A spokesman for Facebook declined to comment. LinkedIn said Mr. Swanson’s post did not violate the site’s terms of service.

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“The challenges posed by the dissemination of fake news and other harmful content through technology platforms are serious,” said Nicole Leverich, a spokeswoman for LinkedIn. “We actively address suspected violations of LinkedIn’s terms of service such as harassment, fake profiles, and misinformation on our platform.”

The Russians appear to have insinuated themselves across American social media platforms and used the same promotional tools that people employ to share cat videos, airline complaints and personal rants. Many of the posts on Being Patriotic also match pre-made, shareable graphics on sites like ConservativeMemes.com, nestled alongside other conservative content made for sharing on social media.

Boosted by Russian accounts, the material was quickly picked up by other American users of Facebook, spreading the posts to an even bigger audience. The Russian presence appeared to be layered throughout different platforms: Some of the Facebook accounts, including Being Patriotic, had linked accounts on Instagram and Twitter, according to deleted content captured in Google’s cache.

John W. Kelly, the founder of Graphika, a commercial analytics company in New York, said the Russians appeared to have a consistent strategy across different platforms. Graphika has tracked thousands of social media accounts whose content closely tracks Russian information operations, promoting articles and videos about WikiLeaks dumps of stolen emails and “false flag” conspiracies about Syrian chemical weapons.

The Russian accounts intermingle with real groups of Facebook or Twitter users — from white nationalists to Bernie Sanders supporters — and seek to manipulate and radicalize them, Mr. Kelly said.

The Russian-influenced networks frequently promote obscure conservative YouTube channels such as the Next News Network and the Trump Breaking News Network, driving up their views and advertising revenue. A video posted in February by a conservative internet radio host, who claimed that 30 politicians were about to be arrested in connection with the “Pizzagate” hoax, racked up more than 300,000 views on YouTube. Another YouTube video, claiming that Michelle Obama had 214 personal assistants and had purchased four yachts with taxpayer money, had close to a million views.

Rather than construct fake grass-roots support behind their ideas — the public relations strategy known as “Astroturfing” — the Russians sought to cultivate and influence real political movements, Mr. Kelly said.

“It isn’t Astroturfing — they’re throwing seeds and fertilizer onto social media,” said Mr. Kelly. “You want to grow it, and infiltrate it so you can shape it a little bit.”


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