![]() I'm constantly looking to learn new things and improve the way I do things that I know. On campus, you would probably find me playing basketball, teaching kids to play the piano as a part of Stanford Melody, writing satire pieces for the Stanford Daily or looking for new places to eat with my friends. Outside of class, my time is generally consumed by varying permuatations of music, tennis, cooking and art. My interest in Computer Science is fueled by the power I see in technology being able to make the world a more level playing field for everyone, not only by improving accessibility the way companies like SignAll do, but also by putting resources that previously required money and expertise, at every individual's fingertips. The convergence of the two disciplines, specifically in the fields of Natural Language Processing and Understanding, have long held my interest and date back to very early enthusiasm for Maths and Spelling Bees in middle school. I'm currently a junior at Stanford University, California, majoring in Computer Science and minoring in Linguistics. People should start respecting the opposite side of the border, at least online and learn to make Twitter or any social platform a safe space for all.Hi! I'm (Sri) Raagavi, a student, software engineer and language enthusiast, from Dubai, UAE. With the goal of helping young professionals to successfully navigate. While the Indian-Pakistan rivalry is not something new, taking it online and forming anti-Pakistani propaganda is too much. She authored research papers on information control technology, platform governance, and content moderation presented at the Yale MacMillan Center, the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy of the Harvard Kennedy School and the Stanford Internet Observatory, among other fora. However, now according to SIO, most of the accounts were heavily active up until 2021, however, now most of the network has been disabled. The owners stated to be friends and family of Indian soldiers, freelancers and even YouTubers but seemed like a façade. ![]() The said accounts also claimed to be Kashmiris whose profile pictures were derived from a cut-up of a shutter shock image, had bios like ‘I love Kashmir’ and ‘Proud Kashmiri’ etc. The tweets contained Hashtags that were related to the Indian and Pakistani rallies and mostly about the Indian-occupied Kashmir, The word ‘Kashmir’ was heavily used and around 40’000 tweets were associated with it. Some spoke spitefully about the military forces in Pakistan and China and even went and targeted those who opposed the Indian government. When did you join the Internet Observatory Chase Small: I joined last August and I joined as a research assistant for their election integrity partnership. ![]() The network as per SIO appreciated the Indian government over its stance in Indian-Occupied Kashmir. Most of these tweets were in English, while some were in Hindi and Urdu as well. One data set contained around 1198 tweets whose country of origin drew back to India. Siegel is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Colorado at Boulder. ![]() She investigates governments policies and practices for forcing. Shelby Grossman Shelby Grossman is a Research Scholar at the Stanford Internet Observatory. Riana Pfefferkorn (she/her) is a Research Scholar at the Stanford Internet Observatory. While the tech giant didn’t take much time removing such tweets from its platform, SIO did not fail to mention the number of tweets that were involved in this active propaganda. Renée DiResta is the Research Manager at the Stanford Internet Observatory. The SIO, on August 24 th, 2022 claimed that Twitter released around 15 data sets that contained anti-Pakistani propaganda on the inline forum. Founded with a 5 million donation from Craigslist creator. However, this certainly might be the first time that the defamation tweets were in huge amounts. That's the idea behind the Stanford Internet Observatory, part of the Stanford Cyber Policy Center where Stamos is a visiting professor. This isn’t the first time that India has defamed Pakistan and was called out by a high-end internet watchdog. In recent days, the news of Stanford Internet Observatory busting India for their proclamations and defamation tactics against Pakistan has been circulating around. A large number of the fake Twitter accounts identified are presenting themselves as Kashmiris that are happy with their lives in India and some even claimed to have relatives in the Indian Army ![]()
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