As per the report, Russian influence operations picked up steam in the past two months and the Microsoft Threat Analysis Center (MTAC) claims to have tracked at least 70 Russian actors engaged in Ukraine-focused disinformation. These actors are reportedly using traditional and social media for their campaigns.
Microsoft says that a Russian threat actor Storm-1516 “has successfully laundered anti-Ukraine narratives into US audiences using a consistent pattern across multiple languages.”
The group first presents an individual as a whistleblower or citizen journalist, who seeds a narrative on a purpose-built video channel. The actor then shows a video “by a seemingly unaffiliated global network of covertly managed websites” followed by amplification by “Russian expats, officials, and fellow travellers.” The US audiences then “repost the disinformation, likely unaware of the original source.”
Microsoft says unlike Russia, China is trying to capitalise on existing socio-political divides. As per the report, China is increasingly using AI in election-related influence campaigns where “People’s Republic of China (PRC) and Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-linked actors leverage generative AI technologies to effectively create and enhance images, memes, and videos.”
Furthermore, Microsoft noted that AI-enhanced content is more influential than fully AI-generated content, and that AI audio is more impactful than AI video.
Microsoft’s report also notes that there has been limited activity from Iran but it “will likely launch acute cyber-enabled influence operations closer to US Election Day.