Citations:Kremlebot

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English citations of Kremlebot and kremlebot

2017
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2019
2020
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2017: Issie Lapowsky, “Facebook May Have more Russian Troll Farms to Worry About,” Wired, September 8:
    "If Facebook has only identified ads purchased by one of these companies, there needs to be an immediate investigation into activity by everything in this 'Kremlebot' empire," Pilipenko says. "This may just be the tip of the iceberg."
  • 2018: Tamara Shcheglova, et al, “Methodology for Measuring Polarization of Political Discourse: Case of Comparing Oppositional and Patriotic Discourse in Online Social Networks,” in Ilya Bychkov, et al, eds., Network Algorithms, Data Mining, and Applications, Springer Proceedings in Mathematics & Statistics, NET, Moscow, Cham, Switzerland: Springer, →ISBN, p 226:
    Separately the supporters of power are characterized by “Kremlebot”, “troll”, “Edinaya Russia” etc.
  • 2019: James Grady, Condor: The Short Takes, New York: MysteriousPress.com/Open Road, →ISBN:
    The ‘Trolls From Ogino [sic].’ Kremlebots. Officially the Internet Research Agency. Your FBI missed it a’coming, but kremlebots and their parallel cadres keep getting bigger and ‘better’ and nastier.
  • 2020: Basskaran Nair, et al, A Primer on Policy Communication in Kazakhstan, Singapore: Palgrave Pivot, →ISBN, p 37:
    Kazakhs call these comments, Nurbots. The name is reminiscent of their Russian counterparts, Kremlebots, that is Internet users who get paid by the state to leave comments and create pro-government content.