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How GOP-linked PR firms use Google’s ad platform to harvest email addresses

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It also owns and runs a supposed news site called Conservative Buzz and, under that banner, it’s been running Google Ads like this:

Conservative Buzz screenshot

Which lead those who click on them to webpages like this:

Conservative Buzz screenshot

That box is ticked on arrival. Clearly not the best polling practice.

The ads appear to be geared towards collecting potential voter email addresses and directing people to questionable news sites. The emails people receive after signing up are either miracle health cures, secret new ways to boost your income or scary news about savings and the latest socialist coming to take them.

According to Google’s political advertising transparency report, DedicatedEmails.com has spent over $3.5 million on more than 3,400 Google ads like the one above to date — promoting poll questions that ultimately ask for email addresses. And it’s not the only company doing this.

In a joint Engadget and Point investigation, we found at least three companies actively placing these types of ads connected to incendiary ‘news’ sites, one of which is run by a Republican donor and another that was registered by a former Trump campaign lawyer.

The sites connected to these ads either regurgitate news from other sources or push out stories like this:

American Patriot Daily

The blurry line of fake news

One of the main tactics Russia’s Internet Research Agency (IRA) used to disrupt the US election in 2016 was to create Facebook pages and news sites meant to look like reputable media organizations, with names like World News Daily Report or abcnews.com.co.

In a similar vein, the three companies we found — DedicatedEmails.com, Ascension Marketing Group, Inc. and Digital Communications LLC — are running ads for news sites or a network of news sites, as is the case with the latter company. While not everything these sites post is false (making them hard to categorically call fake news), their headlines and content seem to serve a political agenda.

DedicatedEmails.com’s site Conservative Buzz seems mostly to post articles with content from other sources, though not necessarily with permission to do so. One piece about weight loss is actually copied from a Medical News Today article.

“We have not given approval for this, and it is in direct violation of our copyright,” Medical News Today Assistant Editor, Phil Riches told Engadget and Point. He said they contacted Conservative Buzz asking them to take down the plagiarized content.

In another article example, Conservative Buzz pulled text from two articles by Politico, with no attribution.

Another site called Mommy Underground (this one is affiliated with Digital Communications LLC) has shared anti-vaxx content:

Mommy Underground

What is markedly different about these sites we’ve uncovered is they are run by marketing firms, groups that work for political campaigns and other businesses. In the case of Conservative Buzz, it even openly states on its website that the site is run by a marketing firm.

DedicatedEmails.com appears to have stopped running Google Ads on November 4th, the day we contacted the organization to comment on this article. By November 8th, Conservative Buzz, a website owned by DedicatedEmails.com and detailed in this article, had been wiped of all of its news content. Many of its surveys remain operational. DedicatedEmails.com has not responded to our request for comment.

Ascension Marketing Group was, according to business records, founded by Stefan Gleason, an active political donor, who has contributed the maximum amount allowed by an individual to at least three Republican candidates this year alone. Ascension has spent over $400,000 on more than 20,000 political ads through Google’s ad platform.

Those visible on Google’s ad library are branded with the logo of Liberty Headlines. The site publishes pieces by Gleason and others with headlines like, “Pocahontas Charts Wealth-Raiding Warpath to the White House,” a reference to presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren. The site Headline Health is also registered to the same North Carolina address, with Stefan Gleason at the helm.

Digital Communications LLC seems to be running the most extensive network of such media sites. The organization has spent considerably less on ads — over $29,000 on 191 Google ads — but has far more sites.

Digital Communications LLC was registered by lawyer David A. Warrington to an address in Virginia that is also home to Rising Media News Network, LLC (responsible for Conservative Revival, Freedom Health News, Survival Institute, Mommy Underground, Black Eye Politics, Proud American Traveler, Christian Life Daily, Deepstate Journal, Great American Wildlife, Liberal Propaganda Exposed, DC Swamp Tales, Better Change Project and 2020 Dirt Sheet), American Patriot News Network LLC, Great American Daily Press LLC, Off the Wire Network LLC, Americans for Life Inc. and Saber Communications, according to business records from the state of Virginia.

All of these sites and marketing companies are registered to the same address in the state of Virginia.

Saber Communications was founded by Michael I. Rothfeld and the company worked as part of the digital operation for Republican Senator Rand Paul’s PAC. Rothfeld himself has run as a Republican for a Congressional seat and a State Senate seat representing Virginia and was the treasurer of the Pro-Life PAC as recently as 2016.

The Center for Responsive Politics’ website opensecrets.org notes that Saber Communication’s political clients in the 2018 cycle included America’s Liberty PAC (Rand Paul’s PAC) and the National Association for Gun Rights (NAGR), which is coincidentally also registered to that same Virginia address by Warrington, according to Virginia business records.

Warrington, who has served as the chairman of NAGR, was general counsel for Paul’s 2012 campaign and was “counsel for the 2016 Trump Campaign to the Credentials, Platform, and Rules Committees at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio”.

Politico describes Warrington as one of Rothfeld’s protégés. The pair both worked for Paul’s 2012 campaign, which suggests that Digital Communications LLC (which has very little presence online) and Saber Communications are at least ideologically linked, if not part of the same operation.

Michael Rothfeld and Saber Communications declined to comment for this story. David Warrington and Digital Communications LLC, Brian and Mike Litman and DedicatedEmails.com, and Stefan Gleason and Ascension Marketing Group did not respond to our request for comment after repeated attempts to reach them.

These groups all push conservative agendas of some stripe, though their tactics are not limited to conservatives. A similar network of Facebook pages tied to the group News for Democracy was uncovered in 2018 promoting liberal policies and ideas under the guise of news disseminated through social media. They spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on Facebook and Google ads.

Rugged Roots

A Facebook ad from News for Democracy on one of its pages, Rugged Roots.

“[Their ads] were targeted at conservatives, but then they were pumping in liberal messaging,” Damon McCoy said about News for Democracy and the affiliated company MotiveAI. He’s an Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at New York University and lead author on NYU’s Online Political Ads Transparency Project.

This playbook is not new; it’s exactly what we saw in 2016 from Russia, according to McCoy and his NYU colleague Laura Edelson.

The new rule book

“Advertisers are behaving as if this is just the new tactic that everyone believes to be effective,” said Laura Edelson, a PhD candidate at New York University, also a lead author on NYU’s Online Political Ads Transparency Project.

With platforms like Google, Twitter and Facebook now opening up their archives of political ads to the public, campaigns may be more inclined to outsource such efforts, not unlike how they often do with television and radio ads, contracting capable marketing firms to create and place. But unlike with television and print ads, it’s not always clear from digital ads who is funding them or even what their ultimate goal is.

What is the purpose of the ad depicted in the video above? A) Genuine polling data B) Gathering emails to sell to interested buyers C) Gathering emails for future campaigning efforts D) Influencing public opinion E) Getting participants to a page offering ‘Cash for Patriots’.

“You’ll often see firms listed as spending on Google rather than the entity behind the actual advertisement,” explains Anna Massoglia, a researcher at the Center for Responsive Politics. “That again creates a gap in disclosure, so unless you even watch the advertisement on Google, sometimes you don’t know who the actual sponsor of the ad is. You just will see the firm or LLC that’s being paid to purchase the ad.”

And even then, it can be extremely difficult to know who’s funding an ad, as it’s not actually required for ad buyers to disclose who’s paid for something when you click through from the ad to the final webpage.

“All ads that run on our platforms have to comply with our ads policies,” a Google spokesperson told us. “We enforce our policies, and where ads are found to breach them, we take action. We are committed to bringing greater transparency to political advertising, and for political advertisers, we have additional requirements, such as verification of the advertiser, a paid-for-by disclosure and inclusion in our political ads Transparency Report.”

American Patriot Daily Poll

The ad for this poll was running October 16 to November 3, 2019. The results? 98.01% (21,064) voted for Yes and 1.99% (427) for No.

“The Federal Election Commission hasn’t sufficiently addressed internet advertising,” said Massoglia. She explains that ads telling people to ‘vote for’ or ‘vote against’ something or someone have to be reported if they run on television or radio. Freedom Health News, Mommy Underground, Proud American Traveler and Deepstate Journal.

Over $120 million has been spent on political ads on Google since May 2018, which is as far back as Google’s public ad archive goes. And that’s just a slice of the pie, with an estimated total of $900 million spent on digital political ads in 2018, according to reporting by Axios.

For the types of companies we found in our research, it’s nearly impossible to know who is funding them. We can’t even rule out that the funders are foreign actors.

“They do have some verification processes for ad buyers to ensure that they’re within the country,” said Massoglia referring to Facebook, though the same applies to Google. “One way to get around those rules is simply to pay a middle man to act as the ad buyer, which is not uncommon, even beyond people who are trying to add extra layers of insulation between their identity and their spending.”

The California Republican

In other cases, some campaigns, Massoglia points out, have skipped the middle man and gone straight to setting up their own ‘news’ sites on Facebook, such as The Californian Republican run by the Devin Nunes Campaign Committee. Other faux local news sites have also been cropping up across the country.

Either way, it looks like political operatives masquerading as news sites and marketing firms amassing the email addresses of potential voters are signs of things to come for the 2020 election.

Credits:
Reporter: Sam Baker
Editors: Aaron Souppouris, Jay McGregor
Copy editor: Lucy Cripps
Images: Conservative Buzz, American Patriot Daily, Mommy Underground, Rugged Roots, Liberty Headlines, The California Republican

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Apple tried and failed to break RED’s stranglehold on RAW video

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RED President Jarred Land said that “we are pleased to see our RedCode patents withstand another challenge,” adding that RED is still working with Apple to get RedCode on its Metal framework. “It has always been Apple + RED, and this was all part of the process defining how we work together in the future,” he said.

To be clear, as I mentioned before, this never really was Apple vs. RED. It has always been APPLE + RED, and this was all part of the process defining how we work together in the future. RED integration with Apple’s METAL framework for realtime R3D playback is coming along well and the work that the two teams are doing together is exceeding expectations. We are very excited for the new Mac Pro and the new XDR pro display and the power they bring to the entire RED workflow.

RED successfully fought back a similar suit from Sony in 2013, so the latest victory could further strengthen the patent. However, the court may have left the door open to another claim, saying Apple’s challenge was “unclear and incomplete.”

RedCode RAW is a video codec that allows you to capture RAW video in much the same way you can capture RAW photos. Apple claimed that RED’s patent was strongly based on two other patents: One pertained to the capture of lossless RAW video at HD, 2K and 4K resolutions, while the other was for a processing technique that allowed for compression of RAW sensor data. Apple argued that since RED’s patent was a combination of two prior patents, its own technology was “unpatentable.”

RED fired back with in-depth responses stating that its work was unique from those patents, and that it had been working on the technology prior to the timeframe that Apple had claimed.

While RAW photography is popular and common on smartphones, RAW video has generally been limited to use by professional filmmakers and video shooters. That’s mainly due to the technical limitations with RAW and not because of the patent. For instance, one minute of 4K RedCode video at 5:1 compression takes up 5.26 GB, while a minute of MP4 video at a typical 150 Mbps takes up 1.13GB. That kind of throughput generates significant heat, so RAW video isn’t really practical for smartphones or small cameras.

As such, this won’t have much of an impact on consumer devices, but it could affect Apple’s ProRes RAW development. As it stands now, companies that make external RAW recorders like Atomos have acquired ProRes RAW licenses from RED, and will likely need to continue to do so. Blackmagic Design, meanwhile, created its own RAW format that doesn’t infringe RED’s patents.

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How to safely watch Mercury pass in front of the Sun today

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While Mercury travels around the Sun every 88 days, it’s tilted orbit means it only passes between the Earth and Sun about 13 times a century. This time, the transit will be visible in a lot of regions (including Euope and Africa), but folks in North and South America will have the best view.

If you’re planning to check it out, however, you’ll need to take great care. If Mercury could talk (and it is the communication planet in astrological terms) it would say “don’t look directly at me as I cross the sun.” Doing so will harm your vision, and you won’t be able to see Mercury anyway with your naked eyes, even with eclipse glasses — it’s just too small.

Rather, you’ll need a telescope or binoculars fitted with a special solar filter. Should you not have one of those, “your local astronomy club may have an opportunity to see the transit using specialized, properly-filtered solar telescopes,” NASA notes. You can’t use a regular telescope or binoculars, even in conjunction with solar eclipse glasses, the space agency added.

If a physical viewing is out of the question, your best bet will be to go online. NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory satellite (SDO) will have the best possible view of the eclipse, and NASA will be broadcasting near-real-time views of the transit right here. To give you an idea of what you’ll see, you can check out the 2016 transit captured by the SDO above.

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Google Maps lets you manage your public profile from the Android app

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Google Maps increasingly thrives on user contributions to fill in details, but you haven’t had the option to manage your public profile from the phone app you’re probably using to make those contributions. That’s a bit backwards, but Google is thankfully setting things right. An updated version of the Android app lets you manage your profile from a new “your profile” item in the side menu. You can make simple tweaks to your name, photo or bio, but you also get a fast track to special privacy controls in settings. Maps allows you to hide your contributions on your profile, and can opt you out of sharing your profile with the businesses you follow.

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Weather Channel app uses Watson to tell you when flu season is coming

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Whatever the conditions are like, you’ll get prevention advice as well as CDC flu reports.

It’s easy to see Flu Insights fueling some paranoia. Do you really want to be afraid of going outside simply because Watson predicted trouble? Used carefully, though, this could help you dodge the flu entirely, or at least put it off when you can’t afford to fall ill. It’s a real-world use of AI that might actually improve your quality of life.

Weather Channel app's Watson-based flu season prediction

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Microsoft AI helps diagnose cervical cancer faster

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A framework for using the AI is now ready for an “internal preview” at SRL. It’s not in use in the field just yet, then, but that’s considerably better than other AI cancer screening methods that typically don’t exist as more than experiments.

There’s an incentive to put this into use quickly. TechCrunch noted that roughly 67,000 women die of cervical cancer in India each year, or more than a quarter of the deaths worldwide. At the same time, there’s just a handful of doctors that can process pap smears and help women take action. SRL alone receives over 100,000 samples per year, and 98 percent of those are normal. The AI would let doctors focus on just the two percent of sampels that are problematic and help women start treatment sooner.

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Korg Minilogue XD update adds key triggers for synth sequences

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The upgrade also brings active step function that lets you add or remove steps from a sequence while you perform. You can control the arpeggiator’s speed and gate time, too. And if you often like to revert back to earlier settings, an original value view lets you see where those settings were and quickly dial your knobs back. The Minilogue XD should now be that much more useful, especially for live performances where you may need to alter sequences in short order.

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Google’s compact, Pixel 4-like Assistant starts reaching older phones

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To be clear, this doesn’t include everything you’ll find in Assistant on the Pixel 4. It doesn’t have the continued conversation or screen context features, for instance, and it certainly doesn’t share the new look. Familiar interface elements are still there. This is more to reflect Google’s new approach, which treats Assistant more as a background companion than a front-and-center experience. Even so, it’s good to know that you don’t have to buy Google’s latest to get an obvious functional difference this quickly.

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Watch a herd of MIT’s Mini Cheetah robots frolic in the fall leaves

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Really, this illustrates how the Mini Cheetah project is moving forward. Now that the bot is proven to work, MIT is building a fleet to lend out examples for research projects. Demos like this are a step toward improvements in robot locomotion and other scientific pursuits. Whatever creepiness you see here could lead to robots that are better-suited to hazardous work, search-and-rescue and other efforts that might just save human lives.

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Amazon Echo Show falls victim to an old flaw at hacking contest

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The patch gap was a “common factor” in many of the Internet of Things hacks at the contest, Gorenc added.

This was the first time contestants could target devices in the Home Automation category, and there were a number of firsts beyond that. Fluoroacetate also compromised a Sony X800G TV (the first television target for Pwn2Own) through a JavaScript flaw in its web browser, while Team Flashback cracked the first router by using a buffer overflow to gain control of a Netgear Nighthawk R6700 router. Not everyone was successful, though — a Facebook Portal withstood hacking attempts.

Amazon said it was “investigating” the Echo Show 5 hack and would take “appropriate steps” to safeguard its devices, although it didn’t elaborate on what it would do or when. It’s safe to say the result illustrated the security risks involved in making smart home devices. Companies may have to fork software (and thus add extra work) to optimize it for connected devices, but that can also introduce flaws if developers aren’t committed to keeping that special code up to date.

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