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A pro-Russian disinformation The campaign uses the artificial intelligence tools for artificial intelligence to fuel a “content explosion” that focuses on the deterioration of existing tensions in terms of global elections, Ukraine and immigration, among other things, by controversy topics, as loud New research published last week.
The campaign, known among many names, including Operating overload And Martrium (Other researchers also bound it Storm-1679), has been in operation since 2023 and has been reconciled by several groups, including the Russian government, Microsoft and the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. The campaign spreads false stories by failing to fail to sow the sowing of the department in democratic countries. While the campaign is aiming for the audience all over the world, including in the USAThe main goal was Ukraine. Hundreds of AI-manipulated videos from the campaign have tried to recharge your Russian stories.
The report describes how between September 2024 and May 2025 the amount of content that is produced by those who run the campaign has increased dramatically and receives millions of views around the world.
In their report, the researchers identified 230 unique content that was funded between the campaign between July 2023 and June 2024, including pictures, videos, QR codes and fake websites. In the past eight months, however, the operation overloaded a total of 587 unique content, with most of them being created with the help of AI tools, according to the researchers.
The researchers said the point of view had been powered by AI tools from consumers who are available online free of charge. This simple access helped with the tactics of the campaign via “content tumamation”, in which those who carried out the company were able to produce several content that pushes the same story thanks to AI tools.
“This is a shift to more scalable, multilingual and increasingly sophisticated propaganda tactics,” wrote researcher from Reset Tech, a non-profit organization based in London, and checks FIRST, a Finnish software company, wrote in the report. “The campaign has significantly improved the production of new content in the past eight months and has signaled a shift to faster and scalable methods for creating content.”
The researchers were also stunned by the variety of tools and types of content that the campaign pursued. “What was a surprise for me was the diversity of the content, the different types of content that they used,” says Aleksandra Atanasova, leads open source intelligence researcher at Reset Tech, says Wired. “It is as if they have diversified their palette to catch as many as different angles of these stories. They layer different types of content one after the other.”
Atanasova added that the campaign apparently did not use custom AI tools to achieve their goals, but used with AI-powered language and image generators that are accessible to everyone.
While it was difficult to identify all tools that used campaign companies, the researchers were able to narrow down on a tool: Flux AI.
Flux Ai is a text-to-in-in-in-in-in-in-im-im-im-im-iM-in-iM-iM-in-iM-in-iM-iM-in-iM-in-iM-in-iM-im-im-im-Im-Immobilien. With the tool for the image analysis of the SIADING image, the researchers found a probability of 99 percent that a number of fake images that were shared by the overload campaign – of which some claimed to appear Muslim migrants and set fire in Berlin and Paris – were created with the help of the generation of pictures from Flux AI.