Though the US Central Intelligence Agency may use
Facebook, Twitter, and the like to keep tabs on targets of interest, the
spy agency has only now officially joined social media--a move hastened
by an imposter who was using the agency's name online.
The agency’s first tweet, which earned the CIA nearly 200,000
Twitter followers in just a few hours, was the appropriately
sarcastic, “We can neither confirm nor deny that this is our
first tweet.” There were already 40,000 followers after just
a single hour online, with the agency's debut on Facebook
sparking a similar conversation on that platform.
“By expanding to these platforms, CIA will be able to more
directly engage with the public and provide information on the
CIA's mission, history, and other developments,” CIA
Director John Brennan said in a press release Friday. “We
have important insights to share, and we want to make sure that
unclassified information about the agency is more accessible to
the American public that we serve, consistent with our national
security mission.”
The CIA admitted as far back as 2011 that its agents and
employees regularly scan social media to spy on intelligence
targets. It already had multiple accounts on Flickr and YouTube,
but only debuted on Twitter Friday because it had spent months
lobbying Twitter to stop someone else who was already using the
@CIA handle.
“There was someone out there impersonating CIA via
Twitter,” spokesperson K. Jordan Caldwell told NBC. “Earlier this year, CIA filed an
impersonation complaint with Twitter and they secured the @CIA
account for us, which is routine for government agencies. This
has been a lengthy process. It's been in the works for a long
time.”
The poser wasn't a member of the Syrian Electronic Army, or even
a veteran of the agency's “enhanced interrogation”
techniques, but the Cleveland Institute of Art, which was cursed
with the same abbreviation as one of the most powerful cloak and
dagger agencies in the world.
“We just deleted that one because it was kind of
confusing,” Jessica Moore, the institute's web manager, told
the Wall Street Journal. “Some people would
mention us in their tweets and they were clearly thinking they
were talking with the 'real CIA,' the Central Intelligence
Agency.”
If the CIA is used to infiltrating foreign governments and aiding
assassinations, though, it was still unprepared for Twitter
trolling. Tweets immediately began pouring into the agency's
timeline from all over the world. Whether it be journalists,
comedians, companies, or conspiracy theorists, seemingly all of
Twitter felt compelled to make a joke that had been made dozens
of times before.
Certainly the most effective trolling so far has come from the
New York Review of Books, which launched an assault on the CIA's
Twitter feed complete with the torture methods used by the CIA
and the date each incident occurred.
Each of the flurry of tweets included a link to the 2009 NY
Review of Boks article titled “US Torture. Voices from the Black Sites,"
which “reveals for the first time the contents of a
confidential Red Cross report about the CIA's secret offshore
prisons.” The link was unavailable for much of the afternoon
Friday, most likely because the site in question was overwhelmed
with the sudden amount of traffic that came from the hundreds of
retweets and favorites.
Along with compelling the Cleveland Institute of Art to give up
its Twitter moniker, the CIA's debut on Twitter is also timely
because it comes as a number of US government agencies have
increasingly relied on social media to communicate with the
public. The trend began a year ago after the Edward Snowden leak,
when the National Security Agency sought to shift the
conversation with its own Twitter account.
“Other US government departments have attempted to use social
media not only to get out their message, but at times to actively
combat America's enemies in sometimes bizarre online spats,”
explained Lee Ferran of ABC News. “The State Department's Think
Again Turn Away Twitter account, for instance, directly engages
in arguments with pro-jihadi computer users. Terrorist groups,
like the Taliban and the Al-Qaeda-allied group Al-Shabab in
Somalia, already have a robust social media presence, which they
use to spread their own propaganda.”
Source:rt.com
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