The image on Telegram announcing the donation to the Nordic Resistance Movement. Screenshot taken on September 8, 2022.
New Antisemitic Trolling Campaign Launched on 4chan
On August 29, 4chan’s /pol board users suggested launching a new antisemitic trolling campaign. The thread advocated putting up stickers and flyers that said “Jews” without additional context to provoke a backlash, modeled on the white supremacist trolling campaign “It’s Okay to Be White.” The campaign is also designed to give the perpetrator plausible deniability if caught. The 4chan post received 324 replies within two days. Of the first 50 comments, 46 were positive towards the campaign, two were negative, and two were neutral or off-topic. Comments included threats of antisemitic violence and the use of antisemitic and racial slurs.
Neo-Nazi Terrorist Manual Advertised on 4chan and Dark Web Imageboard, Located on the Internet Archive and UFile.Io
On August 30, CEP researchers located a campaign on 4chan and a dark web imageboard that advertised an accelerationist neo-Nazi manual that advocates for acts of terrorism. CEP also found the manual on the Internet Archive and Ufile.Io.
The book, originally released on July 14, encouraged acts of terrorism, including mass shootings and attacks on targets including religious institutions, LGBTQ bars, places frequented by people of color, and the destruction of infrastructure to cause a breakdown of order. Written by between 25 and 100 authors, the book encouraged attacks against law enforcement, politicians, African Americans, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Latinos, and LGBTQ people.
The book also advocated for acts of sabotage and included information on targeting infrastructure, including railways, the electric grid, cellphone towers, trucks and depots, highways, bridges, water treatment facilities, and other sites.
The manual also included significant instructions for making homemade explosives. The guide additionally offered advice to individuals committing live-streamed attacks as copycats of the Christchurch terrorist and included advice on committing shootings, including conducting surveillance, target selection, and equipment suggestions.
The thread on 4chan advertising the manual contained several pages taken from the book and had 227 overall comments. Of the first 50 comments, 26 were positive, 17 were negative, and seven were neutral or off-topic. Comments included the promotion of violence against Jews, as well as some commenters suggesting that law enforcement or intelligence agencies created the manual for the purpose of entrapment.
The Internet Archive removed the file quickly after CEP reported it. The cloud storage site Ufile.Io did not remove the manual after CEP reported it, despite the content violating the site’s Terms preventing the upload of content that is “abusive, harassing, threatening, unlawful or promotes or encourages illegal activity.”
Pro-ISIS Content Located on Facebook
In a sample of pro-ISIS content on Facebook located on September 7, CEP found ten Facebook accounts that posted a variety of full ISIS propaganda videos, segments taken from videos, Amaq footage, pages taken from ISIS’s Rumiyah magazine and the weekly al-Naba news publication, and photo propaganda. Five of the ten accounts had between 1 and 1,860 friends or followers, with an average of 728. Five accounts had an unlisted number of friends or followers.
CEP located two full-length ISIS videos. The first, “Makers of Epic Battles 6,” from ISIS’s self-proclaimed West Africa province, was originally released on April 6, 2022, and uploaded to Facebook the same day. Approximately five months later, the video had 649 views and was shared 94 times. Facebook removed the video approximately five minutes after CEP reported it. The second video from ISIS’s self-proclaimed India state, “Jihad of the Believers Continues #8,” was released on March 25, 2022, and uploaded to Facebook on July 29. The video had 92 views on September 7. CEP reported the video to Facebook on September 7, but it was still online approximately five days later.
One of the Facebook accounts uploaded a photo of a young child estimated to be between the ages of four and eight, taken from a notorious ISIS video released on January 8, 2017. The video shows the child committing an execution of a civilian with a handgun. While the photo, which was uploaded to Facebook on April 1, did not show explicit violence, the photo was taken from a particularly disturbing ISIS execution video.
It is unclear why Facebook’s hashing system or artificial intelligence did not detect the various ISIS videos or photos.
CEP reported all 10 accounts to Facebook on September 7. All were still online five days later. The two videos were reported separately. One was removed within 48 hours.