It’s no secret that Russia has taken advantage of the Internet’s global reach and low distribution costs to flood the online world with huge quantities of propaganda (as have other nations): Techdirt has been writing about Putin’s troll army for a decade now. Russian organizations like the Internet Research Agency have been paying large numbers of people to write blog and social media posts, comments on Web sites, create YouTube videos, and edit Wikipedia entries, all pushing the Kremlin line, or undermining Russia’s adversaries through hoaxes, smears and outright lies. But technology moves on, and propaganda networks evolve too. The American Sunlight Project (ASP) has been studying one of them in particular: Pravda (Russian for “truth”), a network of sites that aggregate pro-Russian material produced elsewhere. Recently, ASP has noted some significant changes (pdf) there:
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