Predictions on The Growth of Disinformation in 2022

These predictions are based on information on the Kinzen website at www.kinzen.com plus other information sources.

Disinformation is spread by governments, organisations and individuals for a wide variety of reasons.

They may want to damage a country, business or people or to take advantage in some other way or to spread their propaganda or hide their activities and it is becoming a more sophisticated battle every year for people to discern truth from disinformation.

QAnon

QAnon is a strange phenomena where a mysterious figure spread disinformation and made predictions which mostly have not come true and yet has a large very committed following. It is described as an American far-right political conspiracy theory and movement centred on false claims made by an anonymous individual or individuals, known by the name “Q”, that a cabal of Satanic people operate at high levels in the US government and other countries.

This does sound ridiculous but it has a significant following. Q knew how to press the buttons for some conspiracy theorists and others and it refuses to go away, at least for now.

It is likely that more such conspiracy groups will form over the coming years and use many of the same tactics and ideas as QAnon.

Politics

October 2022 is the time for the general election in Brazil and many expect to see fighting over the legitimacy of the electoral process

The French presidential contest is in April 2022 and there may be more sophisticated forms of misinformation used to push the results one way or another.

Hungary’s populist pioneer Viktor Orban is facing a tough challenge from a united opposition in April. Orban has used creeping state control of media to seed storylines that appeal to established prejudice and end with some “sort of discriminatory legislation against independent voices.” The Orban government is already warning that the US will attempt to influence the vote, creating the very prospect of a disinformation campaign about disinformation.

The Disinformation War

The Oxford Internet Institute believes that 81 countries have taken part in online propaganda and covert influence campaigns perhaps as part of their foreign policy.

“Disinformation for hire’ will continue to be a growth industry. The Oxford Internet Institute identified 48 countries in which the state had partnered with private ‘strategic communications’ firms to spread “computational propaganda” and use bots to create the impression of trending political messaging.

Russia and China are very likely to step-up up their disinformation activities on a larger scale then ever, using state actors and private companies.

Facebook

Facebook whistle-blower Frances Haugen gave the world a better view of the inside of Facebook and whether they ‘care’ about stopping misinformation from spreading on their platform.

However various governments are putting more pressure on Facebook to take their responsibilities more seriously and invest more money in blocking all kinds of misleading or illegal content.

If you have any experiences with these scams do let me know, by email.

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Valentine’s Day Scams

Many scammers try to take advantage of holidays, events or anything in the news and Valentine’s Day is a big target for them.

Scam #1: Valentine’s Day E-Cards

There’s always lots of ads for electronic cards (e-cards) and especially around public holidays. If you want to try sending such cards – it’s better to find a website yourself rather than clicking on an advert.

If you receive what seems to be a Valentine’s e-card then be careful as many are created by scammers and sent out by the million. Rather than clicking the link to see the e-card – hover your cursor over the link and see if it does link to the website you expect. If it does then go to the website (do not click the link) and see if there is a card waiting for you. This doesn’t guarantee the e-card is safe but does exclude most forms of the scam.

Scam #2: Valentine’s Gift Cards

A Valentine’s gift card may seem a good idea and the adverts try to convince you they are the safest way to please someone.

But many are scams so beware inputting any confidential details and paying online. Make sure the site is a reputable one.

Scam #3: Buying Flowers Online

If you look on the Internet there are many choices of flower shop offering to deliver the perfect Valentine’s day surprise, but there are also pop up scam flower shops. Many offer beautiful bouquets at amazing prices (photos copied from a legitimate site of course) and some are taken in by this.

Always pick a reputable seller – preferably with well-known bricks and mortar branches around the country or at least one that has been around for some time and built a good reputation.

Scam #4. Online Dating

For some, this is a time to turn to online dating to look for the right partner. There is a huge array of websites and APPS offering to find your Mr Right or Miss Right, but there are also many new such sites and APPS appearing all of the time. Many of these are legitimate and do a good job but some are scam sites simply looking for confidential information and your credit card details.

Choose a site or APP that has a good reputation rather than a bargain offer.

Once in the world of online dating there are many scammers who post fake profiles and try to hook up with a number of people. They create very appealing profiles but their intention is to form a bond very quickly then start to get money from you – maybe a small gift or help to pay translation costs or money to visit you.

These people will likely research you online by looking at any profiles and posts on social media so they can see what you would like and use that to entice you further into a relationship.

If someone you have never met professes undying love for you then it’s going to be a scam.

Scam #5. Social Media Posts

Posting romantic moments on social media is very popular this time of year – but be careful before you click on any poems, letters , quizzes, surveys etc. directed to you on social media.

APPS on Facebook and other sites are not necessarily as safe as you expect, especially not just because they are about romance.

Stay safe.

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Essay Writing Services Scam

On the Internet, there are numerous essay writing services. These are supposed to be used as examples or for research and not handed in for exams or coursework as if work done by the student, but we all know that cheating goes on. You need an essay for college so you pay a service to write it for you

These are illegal in New Zealand but most countries haven’t yet followed this lead.

One such service is grademiners.com, but there are hundreds of others.

The scammer’s email claims to be from grademiners.com but that is probably not true as the grammar and misspelling in the message is atrocious e.g.

“It call’s Graderminers”

“I am admin of big website of essay writing service”.

“I want to create catching content in your website”

“I’ll try to connect topic of your site with education direction”

Maybe this is the result of machine translation from another language. However, whatever the source, I would not employ someone who writes emails like that to work on my website. No thanks.

Read more about essay writing services at https://fightbackonline.org/index.php/guidance/12-explanations/101-do-you-need-an-essay

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Trust Pilot Reviews

https://uk.trustpilot.com

Trustpilot is an online review community founded in Denmark in 2007 by Peter Holten Mühlmann.

The website has more than 120 million reviews of 529,000 businesses and 1,000,000 new reviews each month created by 45,000 reviewers each day. So you can see this is a serious business and also that there must be a huge need for unbiased reviews of businesses.

Trustpilot “believe that people’s voices should be heard, which is why we’re dedicated to helping everyone share their genuine experiences. We’re committed to being the most trusted online review community on the market. Genuine reviews written by consumers are published instantly without censoring, and businesses can see and reply to them”

TrustPilot say they have zero tolerance for fraud and investigate any reported misuse

How Does TrustPilot Make Money?

They offer a series of packages to businesses for a monthly subscription.

The key sales points for these are:-

  • Connect with your customers by collecting reviews
  • Automate a review collection process seamlessly into your customer journey.
  • Build trust on a platform for both businesses and customers
  • Gather feedback and interact with customers on an independent website consumers trust.
  • Showcase your reputation where it matters
  • Amplify your presence across all channels including search, social, paid, and offline media.

The four business plans are:-

Free Plan £ 0 PER MONTH Lite Plan $200 PER MONTH (PAID ANNUALLY) Plus a number of paid modules, including:

–          Invite

–          Enhance

–          Support

–          Insights

–          API

–          Connect etc.

Collect & respond to Trustpilot reviews for free. Showcase reviews on your website & clearly demonstrate marketing ROI.

 

If you want to build trust for your company. Then Trust Pilot  may be able to help.

Do leave a comment on this post – click on the post title then scroll down to leave your comment.

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Is Your PC Making Bitcoins for Someone

Criminals keep finding new ways to take advantage of us.

Bitcoins and other cyber currencies are constantly in the news and this has led to endless scam offers of untold wealth from Bitcoins and other cyber currencies. But there’s also a new way for criminals to take advantage of you.

The Creation of New Bitcoins

This is through a process called ‘mining’ and it applies to most cyber currencies.

Cyber currencies use something called the Blockchain to keep a record of the currency and updating that Blockchain uses huge amounts of computer processing. Mining needs progressively more and more computing power to make those updates and this slows down the creation of more Bitcoins for example.

Bitcoin has been in circulation for some years and effective mining requires super computers.

However, hackers get around this by stealing processing power from large numbers of other people’s computers – possibly your computer.

The hackers infect your computer with malware that lets them download data to be processed and upload the results back to themselves. If you find your computer is always slow and seems to be busy doing something you haven’t asked it to do – this can mean your computer has been infected and is busy working for someone else.

The same hacking tool that allowed the Wannacry ransomware to wreak destruction in 2017 has also been used by hackers to take over people’s computers and use them for mining.

Another similar one is called Smominru and makes infected computers mine for the cyber currency Monero. It is thought that up to half a million computers were taken over for this purpose.

Make sure your computer is protected against these attacks through the use of anti-virus and anti-malware, take regular backups in case of data corruption or ransomware attacks.

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