Only Thing 'Exposed' By Bad Reporting About Russia/Trump Link Is Malware Researchers' Unethical Behavior
On Monday evening, you may have seen news of a "big scoop" at Slate by famed reporter Franklin Foer, about how Donald Trump had a server that was "communicating" with a Russian server. Foer, who famously got pushed out of The New Republic for not being very with it on technology on the internet (among other things), makes a really big deal out of some really weak tea. After reading the article (along with another one alleging Russian spies had been "cultivating" Trump) I tweeted out that the evidence on both was super weak. I kept expecting a smoking gun in the Foer piece, but instead got a lot of handwaving and confusion about DNS. Of course, Clinton supporters were quick to jump on the article as some sort of proof, despite the really weak claims.
A lot of Foer's work stems from an anonymous blog post from a few weeks earlier that tries to make a big deal out of some extraordinarily weak connections. The confirmation bias is strong with the folks involved here. The biggest clue? This ridiculous chart that tries to show increased activity between the Trump server and the Russian bank server at key moments, but doesn't actually show that. There seem to be random ups and downs at the conventions, and then a huge spike in the middle of August which corresponds with... nothing. But the researchers and Foer just ignore it. In fact, Foer actually claims that "there were considerably more DNS lookups, for instance, during the two conventions." Except there weren't really.
