Larissa Doroshenko Postdoctoral Teaching Associate l.doroshenko@northeastern.edu 617-373-7246 Expertise Russia Ukraine war Larissa Doroshenko in the Press Newsweek Putin Struggling to Appease Three Key Factions as Regime Faces Pressure—ISW Larissa Doroshenko, an expert on Russian disinformation from Boston’s Northeastern University, told Newsweek last week that the mobilization was part of Putin’s attempt to do something “to turn around this war and change the momentum” but this was not solely in response to the bloggers’ criticism. Newsweek Russian State TV Defends Drunk Conscripts Amid Mobilization Failures Larissa Doroshenko, a Russian disinformation expert who is a teaching associate at Boston’s Northeastern University, said that state media outlets had to address the botched mobilization because criticism from citizens made it impossible to ignore. Big Tech tried to quash Russian propaganda. Russia found loopholes. Increasingly, Russia is working to spread such messages in Africa and other parts of the global South, where tech companies’ content moderation enforcement tends to be lax, said Larissa Doroshenko, a postdoctoral scholar at Northeastern University who researches disinformation. Ukraine’s volunteer online army: Meet the ‘cyber elves’ fighting Russian trolls on Facebook Russian operatives typically use five D’s: distort, distract, dismiss, deny and dismay, according to Larissa Doroshenko, a postdoctoral teaching associate at Northeastern University.
Newsweek Putin Struggling to Appease Three Key Factions as Regime Faces Pressure—ISW Larissa Doroshenko, an expert on Russian disinformation from Boston’s Northeastern University, told Newsweek last week that the mobilization was part of Putin’s attempt to do something “to turn around this war and change the momentum” but this was not solely in response to the bloggers’ criticism.
Newsweek Russian State TV Defends Drunk Conscripts Amid Mobilization Failures Larissa Doroshenko, a Russian disinformation expert who is a teaching associate at Boston’s Northeastern University, said that state media outlets had to address the botched mobilization because criticism from citizens made it impossible to ignore.
Big Tech tried to quash Russian propaganda. Russia found loopholes. Increasingly, Russia is working to spread such messages in Africa and other parts of the global South, where tech companies’ content moderation enforcement tends to be lax, said Larissa Doroshenko, a postdoctoral scholar at Northeastern University who researches disinformation.
Ukraine’s volunteer online army: Meet the ‘cyber elves’ fighting Russian trolls on Facebook Russian operatives typically use five D’s: distort, distract, dismiss, deny and dismay, according to Larissa Doroshenko, a postdoctoral teaching associate at Northeastern University.