How a fake persona laid the groundwork for a Hunter Biden conspiracy deluge
A 64-page document that was later disseminated by close associates of President Donald Trump appears to be the work of a fake "intelligence firm."
Image: Hunter Biden
Hunter Biden speaks at the World Food Program USA's annual awards ceremony in Washington in April 2016.Paul Morigi / Getty Images file
Oct. 29, 2020, 2:30 PM PDT / Updated Oct. 30, 2020, 8:19 AM PDT
By Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny
One month before a purported leak of files from Hunter Biden's laptop, a fake "intelligence" document about him went viral on the right-wing internet, asserting an elaborate conspiracy theory involving former Vice President Joe Biden's son and business in China.
The document, a 64-page composition that was later disseminated by close associates of President Donald Trump, appears to be the work of a fake "intelligence firm" called Typhoon Investigations, according to researchers and public documents.
The author of the document, a self-identified Swiss security analyst named Martin Aspen, is a fabricated identity, according to analysis by disinformation researchers, who also concluded that Aspen's profile picture was created with an artificial intelligence face generator. The intelligence firm that Aspen lists as his previous employer said that no one by that name had ever worked for the company and that no one by that name lives in Switzerland, according to public records and social media searches.
One of the original posters of the document, a blogger and professor named Christopher Balding, took credit for writing parts of it when asked about it and said Aspen does not exist.
Despite the document's questionable authorship and anonymous sourcing, its claims that Hunter Biden has a problematic connection to the Communist Party of China have been used by people who oppose the Chinese government, as well as by far-right influencers, to baselessly accuse candidate Joe Biden of being beholden to the Chinese government.
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The document and its spread have become part of a wider effort to smear Hunter Biden and weaken Joe Biden's presidential campaign, which moved from the fringes of the internet to more mainstream conservative news outlets.
An unverified leak of documents — including salacious pictures from what President Donald Trump's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani and a Delaware Apple repair store owner claimed to be Hunter Biden's hard drive — were published in the New York Post on Oct. 14. Associates close to Trump, including Giuliani and former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, have promised more blockbuster leaks and secrets, which have yet to materialize.
The fake intelligence document, however, preceded the leak by months, and it helped lay the groundwork among right-wing media for what would become a failed October surprise: a viral pile-on of conspiracy theories about Hunter Biden.
Behind Typhoon
The Typhoon Investigations document was first posted in September to Intelligence Quarterly, an anonymous blog "dedicated to collecting important daily news," according to its "about" section. Historical domain records show the blog was registered to Albert Marko, a self-described political and economic adviser, who also lists the blog on his Twitter bio. When asked about the provenance of the document, Marko said he received it from Balding.
Balding, previously an associate professor at Fulbright University Vietnam who studied the Chinese economy and financial markets, posted the document on his blog on Oct. 22, seven weeks after it was initially published.
"I had really not wanted to do this but roughly 2 months ago I was handed a report about Biden activities in China the press has simply refused to cover. I want to strongly emphasize I did not write the report but I know who did," Balding said in an email.
Balding later claimed to NBC News that he wrote some of the document.
"I authored small parts of the report and was involved in report preparation and review. As a researcher, and due to the understandable worry about foreign disinformation, it was paramount that the report document activity from acknowledged and public sources," Balding said. "Great care was taken to document, cite, and retain information so that acknowledged facts could be placed in the public domain."
Image: Martin Aspen deepfake
A viral dossier about Hunter Biden was written by "Martin Aspen," a fake identity whose profile picture was created by artificial intelligence.TyphoonInvesti1 / via Twitter
Balding said Aspen is "an entirely fictional individual created solely for the purpose of releasing this report." Balding did not name the document's main author, saying "the primary author of the report, due to personal and professional risks, requires anonymity."
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Balding claimed that the document was commissioned by Apple Daily, a Hong Kong-based tabloid that is frequently critical of the Chinese government. A spokesperson for Apple Daily confirmed it had worked with Balding on the document.
In addition to posting the document to his blog, Balding also promoted it in far-right media, appearing on Bannon's podcast and on "China Unscripted," a podcast produced by The Epoch Times, a pro-Trump media outlet opposed to the Chinese government.
Balding, an American who taught economics at China's Peking University HSBC Business School until 2018, is often critical of the Chinese government. He made news this year as a source uncovering a global bulk data collection operation by the Chinese company Shenzhen Zhenhua Data Technology.
Blog posts highlighting the most salacious parts of the document, including articles from the Intelligence Quarterly Blog, Revolver News and Balding's blog, received 70,000 public interactions — which includes reactions, comments and shares — across Facebook, Twitter and Reddit, according to the social media analysis tool BuzzSumo.
Balding's blog was the primary driver of virality in conservative and conspiracy communities. The report itself was shared across Facebook and Twitter around 5,000 times, according to BuzzSumo, and more than 80 sites linked back to the blog, which was shared more than 25,000 times on Facebook and Twitter. Hyperpartisan and conspiracy sites like ZeroHedge and WorldNetDaily led the pack.
After the promise of a big reveal one day earlier, the document was also posted on the extremist forum 8kun by Q, the anonymous account behind the QAnon conspiracy theory movement.
On Twitter, the document was pushed by influencers in the QAnon community, as well as by Dinggang Wang, an anti-Chinese government YouTube personality who works for Guo Wengui, a billionaire who fled China amid accusations of bribery and other crimes. Republican Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House of Representatives, tweeted the document to his 2.3 million followers.
'Immediately suspicious'
The document gained attention from disinformation researchers in part because of the image of the document's author.
Elise Thomas, a researcher at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, first spotted telltale signs of a fake photo when she went searching for Typhoon Investigations' Aspen on the web. Thomas found a Twitter account for Aspen named @TyphoonInvesti1, which had posted a link to Typhoon's WordPress page that contained the document on Aug. 15.
The profile picture for Aspen immediately showed signs of being a computer-generated image that can be created by computers and even some websites. Aspen's ears were asymmetrical, for one, but his left eye is what gave away that he did not really exist. Aspen's left iris juts out and appears to form a second pupil, a somewhat frequent error with computer-generated faces.
"The most obvious tell was the irregular shape of the irises," Thomas said. "The profile picture looks pretty convincing in the Twitter thumbnail, but when I popped it up into full view I was immediately suspicious."
Thomas then consulted with Ben Nimmo, director of investigations at the analytics company Graphika, who noted the other telltale sign of a computer-generated face.
"One of the things he and his team have figured out is that if you layer a lot of these images over the top of one another, the eyes align," Thomas said. "He did that with this image, and the eyes matched up."
Other parts of Aspen's identity were clearly stolen from disparate parts of the web. Aspen's Facebook page was created in August, and it featured only two pictures, both from his "new house," which were tracked back to reviews on the travel website Tripadvisor. The logo for Typhoon Investigations was lifted from the Taiwan Fact-Checking Center, a digital literacy nonprofit.
Aspen claimed on his LinkedIn profile to have worked for a company called Swiss Security Solutions from 2016 to 2020. Swiss Security Solutions denied having ever employed anyone named Aspen, and it said it had found fake accounts for two other people pretending to have worked for the company.
"Martin Aspen was never a freelancer or worker of the Swiss Security Solutions. We do not know this person. According to our Due Diligence Software, this person does not exist in Switzerland," Swiss Security Solutions Chairman Bojan Ilic said, adding that the company has reported the profile to LinkedIn.
Fake faces
Computer-generated faces have become a staple of large-scale disinformation operations in the run-up to the election. In December, Facebook took down a network of fake accounts using computer-created faces tied to The Epoch Times. Facebook removed over 600 accounts tied to the operation, which pushed pro-Trump messages and even served as moderators of some Facebook groups. Stephen Gregory, publisher of the U.S. editions of The Epoch Times, has denied any connection to the accounts.
Last month, Facebook removed another batch of computer-generated profiles originating in China and the Philippines, some of which made anti-Trump posts.
Renee DiResta, a researcher at the Stanford Internet Observatory, said computer-created identities are becoming common for disinformation campaigns, in part because they are easy to create.
DiResta, who helped examine a ring of AI-generated faces tied to the conservative nonprofit Turning Point USA last month, said computer-generated profile pictures can be used to "build an army of fake people" to artificially support a cause or to make "disinformation operations harder to discover."
"One of the things that investigators look at to understand the narrative that is spreading is whether the accounts are authentic, whether they're real," DiResta said. "If they were to use a stock photo, it confirms something dishonest is likely happening. By using an AI-generated face, you're guaranteeing you won't find that person elsewhere on the internet."
CORRECTION (Oct 30, 2020. 11:19 a.m. ET): An earlier version of this article misstated Christopher Balding’s position at Fulbright University Vietnam. As of Thursday afternoon, the university had listed him as being currently employed, but later put out a statement saying he was a former professor. He is no longer an employee of the university as of Sept. 10, 2020.
Ben Collins
Ben Collins covers disinformation, extremism and the internet for NBC News.
Image: Brandy Zadrozny
Brandy Zadrozny
Brandy Zadrozny is an investigative reporter for NBC News.
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上面來自NBC
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下面來自香港01,基本就是上文翻譯
黎智英助手Mark Simon被踢爆委託撰寫拜登兒子醜聞 深夜辭職
社會新聞
撰文:鄧穎琳黃金棋
2020-10-31 01:44
最後更新日期:2020-10-31 02:30
美國全國廣播公司(NBC)在美國總統選舉前報道,早前網上流傳一份有關美國民主黨總統候選人拜登(Joe Biden)的兒子亨特(Hunter Biden)在中國做生意的64頁文件,或涉造假,報道更指香港《蘋果日報》有份委託撰寫。香港《蘋果日報》及台灣《蘋果日報》亦分別發聲明,指並無委託無任人撰寫相關文件或報告,要求NBC盡快澄清。
壹傳媒創辦人黎智英承認其助手Mark Simon有參與,惟黎稱事先不知情。而Mark Simon在10月30日晚上,透過個人twitter上承認涉事,支付了1萬美元予撰寫人,並就事件致歉,周五(30日)深夜宣布辭職(Tonight, that is best served by my resignation getting underway)。
Mark Simon被踢爆委託撰寫拜登兒子醜聞,周五深夜在個人Twitter中宣布辭職。(路透社)
Mark Simon被踢爆委託撰寫拜登兒子醜聞,周五深夜在個人Twitter中宣布辭職。(路透社)
撰寫報告安全分析師身份及相片均屬偽造
NBC《How a fake persona laid the groundwork for a Hunter Biden conspiracy deluge》報道,指網上流傳一份64頁的文件,內容有關民主黨總統候選人拜登的兒子亨特在中國的生意,或由是虛假的情報機構所作。報道指該文件作者自稱為瑞士安全分析師,名為馬丁.阿斯彭(Martin Aspen),但有專家分析認為該身份屬偽造,其個人圖片為人工智能合成;其聲稱曾工作的情報公司亦表示,沒有該名字的人曾在公司工作,而公共記錄及社交媒體亦沒有該名字的人在瑞士生活。
報道稱,報告是由一間虛假的情報機構「Typhoon Investigations」所寫,最早發表該文件的其中一人是Christopher Balding,他承認有份撰寫,而馬丁.阿斯彭並不存在,解釋是考慮到風險所以使用假名。報道引述Balding所言,稱有關文件是由香港《蘋果日報》委託撰寫的,報道更引述「《蘋果日報》的發言人」證實與Balding合作處理該文件。
《蘋果日報》報道指,黎智英透過短片向員工澄清有關NBC報道內容,強調對事件全不知情。(資料圖片)
香港《蘋果日報》聲明指,該報並無委託Christopher Balding或任何人士撰寫任何文件或報告。(資料圖片)
壹傳媒創辦人黎智英在10月30日下午,透過短片回應事件。他承認私人助手Mark Simon有參與事件,但他本人事先並不知情。
Mark Simon晚上在個人twitter上承認涉事,並就事件致歉及宣布辭職。(網上圖片)
Mark Simon晚上在個人twitter上承認涉事,並就事件致歉及宣布辭職。(網上圖片)
Mark Simon認付1萬美元予撰寫人
Mark Simon晚上在個人twitter上承認涉事,並就事件致歉及宣布辭職(Tonight, that is best served by my resignation getting underway)。他形容對事件感到後悔,但重申自己很多年前已不是《蘋果日報》發言人。
香港《蘋果日報》引述Mark Simon稱,他曾經以私人身份委託Balding對報告中的相關人士進行背景調查,並曾在黎智英的私人公司中提取了1萬美元,經他的私人公司向Balding支付,作為調查的開支,並稱原本委託的目的亦只是調查,並非要發表報告。
黎智英於其Twitter中回應事件時指,Mark Simon利用黎的私人公司資金作有關研究,由於只需1萬美元,故他不需要黎的批准。
美國NBC報道《How a fake persona laid the groundwork for a Hunter Biden conspiracy deluge》。( NBC網頁截圖)
美國NBC報道《How a fake persona laid the groundwork for a Hunter Biden conspiracy deluge》。( NBC網頁截圖)
黎智英任董事公司 向法庭申請禁制令 要警還涉法律保護資料
黎智英就涉六四集會案再上庭 對再遭警搜查 黎:我無理咁多啦
被控非法集結今午再提訊 警國安處搜黎智英觀塘辦公室
泛民15人案|黎智英等14人不認罪 分4案審理 首案明年2月開審
涉刑恐東方記者 黎智英罪名不成立 律政司提上訴
港、台《蘋果日報》發聲明劃清界線 否認委託撰寫
香港《蘋果日報》發聲明指,並無委託Christopher Balding或任何人士撰寫任何文件或報告,而NBC報道提及的64頁文件與香港《蘋果日報》無關,港蘋事先無收過任何NBC查詢,之前亦無就事件作過正式回應。
台灣《蘋果日報》聲明則批評報道內容嚴重謬誤,強調公司「從未委託任何人寫該份「文件」(documents),或參與任何跟此一調查報告製作、撰寫有關的事情,與這份文件亳無關係」,只承認約兩個月前取得署名為Typhoon Investigations公司所寫的調查報告,惟由於兩者皆屬「極為陌生的國外來源」,為求謹慎,最終報道引用的報告內容曾重新查核,聲明批評NBC未有查證便報道,促對方盡快澄清
內文真假,如何評估,各自查証,並不是誰說了算,更不是立場決定,沒有想當然
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草滿池塘水滿陂 山啣落日浸寒漪
牧童歸去橫牛背 短笛無腔信口吹