Analyzing the Digital Traces of Political Manipulation: The 2016 Russian Interference Twitter Campaign
Adam Badawy, Emilio Ferrara, Kristina Lerman

TL;DR
This study analyzes the 2016 Russian interference Twitter campaign, revealing how trolls and bots targeted conservative users, influencing political discourse and spreading misinformation during the U.S. election.
Contribution
It introduces a large-scale dataset and a novel method to classify user ideology with high accuracy, providing insights into the spread of political manipulation on Twitter.
Findings
Conservatives retweeted Russian trolls 31 times more often than liberals.
Most troll retweets originated from Tennessee and Texas.
Approximately 5-6% of users were identified as bots.
Abstract
Until recently, social media was seen to promote democratic discourse on social and political issues. However, this powerful communication platform has come under scrutiny for allowing hostile actors to exploit online discussions in an attempt to manipulate public opinion. A case in point is the ongoing U.S. Congress' investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election campaign, with Russia accused of using trolls (malicious accounts created to manipulate) and bots to spread misinformation and politically biased information. In this study, we explore the effects of this manipulation campaign, taking a closer look at users who re-shared the posts produced on Twitter by the Russian troll accounts publicly disclosed by U.S. Congress investigation. We collected a dataset with over 43 million election-related posts shared on Twitter between September 16 and October 21, 2016, by…
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