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700UW said:
Petey is that you?700UW said:
he's tying to stay from posting outright lies and looking like a dumb a.delldude said:Where were you when Mickey stole from Alinsky in 2008?
I don't recall you posting about that......not to be a hypocrite or anything like that.
700UW said:
Kev3188 said:For those of you on the Twitters, #FamousMelaniaTrumpQuotes is both trending and hilarious.
You're welcome.
Two years ago, in a report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the social networking site Twitter estimated that more than 23 million of its active user accounts were being run by “bots” — software agents or bits of code that act on their own to respond to news and world events. They interact with real users, never revealing their true nature.
Bots of this kind have
been used in efforts to sway public opinion in Central America already for a decade. The hacker and political operative Andrés Sepúlveda claims to have employed armies of bots to influence at least a half-dozen major election results in Mexico, Colombia, Nicaragua and elsewhere.
Could the same happen in the U.S. and Europe? Probably so, given recent findings on bot activity ahead of Britain’s vote to leave the European Union. As part of the Computational Propaganda Research Project at Oxford University researchers looked at some 300,000 Twitter accounts and found that a mere 1 percent of them generated about one third of all tweets relevant to the Brexit debate. They believe that many of those accounts were run by bots, because human users could not have sustained such a level of activity without the help of automation. It’s not clear whether the activity swayed the result, though the Leave campaign did generate more automated tweets.
This issue is far bigger than Brexit: The disturbing reality is that computational propaganda is already with us. In the U.S. presidential race, Twitter bots support both Trump and Clinton. Bots of various kinds live on cloud servers and operate 24 hours a day, and account for about 50 percent of all activity on the web. According to the Central American hacker, Sepúlveda, peoples’ opinions tend to be swayed more by views they see as coming spontaneously from real people than by views expressed on television or in newspapers.
http://heatst.com/tech/beware-of-twitter-robots-telling-people-how-to-vote/
who's appearing next week other than some establishment con artist?700UW said:Oh look another has been never was is scheduled to speak.
Antonio Sabato Jr.
Wow, such stellar star power Trump is attracting.