On Friday the Washington Post sparked a wave of fear when it ran
the breathless headline “Russian
hackers penetrated U.S. electricity grid through a utility in Vermont, U.S.
officials say.” The lead sentence offered “A code associated with the Russian
hacking operation dubbed Grizzly Steppe by the Obama administration has been
detected within the system of a Vermont utility, according to U.S. officials”
and continued “While the Russians did not actively use the code to disrupt
operations of the utility, according to officials who spoke on condition of
anonymity in order to discuss a security matter, the penetration of the
nation’s electrical grid is significant because it represents a potentially
serious vulnerability.”
Yet, it
turns out this narrative was false and as the chronology below will show,
illustrates how effectively false and misleading news can ricochet through the
global news echo chamber through the pages of top tier newspapers that fail to
properly verify their facts.
The original article
was posted online on the Washington Post's website at 7:55PM EST. Using the
Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, we
can see that sometime between 9:24PM and 10:06PM the Post updated the
article to indicate that multiple computer systems at the utility had been
breached ("computers" plural), but that further data was still being
collected: “Officials said that it is unclear when the code entered the Vermont
utility’s computers, and that an investigation will attempt to determine the
timing and nature of the intrusion.” Several paragraphs of additional material
were added between 8PM and 10PM, claiming and contextualizing the breach as part
of a broader campaign of Russian hacking against the US, including the DNC and
Podesta email breaches.
Despite the
article ballooning from 8 to 18 paragraphs, the publication date of the article
remained unchanged and no editorial note was appended, meaning that a reader
being forwarded a link to the article would have no way of knowing the article
they were seeing was in any way changed from the original version published 2
hours prior.
Yet, as the Post’s story ricocheted through the politically
charged environment, other media outlets and technology experts began
questioning the Post’s claims and the utility company itself finally issued a
formal statement at
9:37PM EST, just an hour and a half after the Post's publication, pushing back
on the Post’s claims: “We detected the malware in a single Burlington Electric
Department laptop not connected to our organization’s grid systems. We took
immediate action to isolate the laptop and alerted federal officials of this
finding.”
From Russian
hackers burrowed deep within the US electrical grid, ready to plunge the nation
into darkness at the flip of a switch, an hour and a half later the story
suddenly became that a single non-grid laptop had a piece of malware on it and
that the laptop was not connected to the utility grid in any way.
However, it was not until almost a full hour after the utility’s
official press release (at around 10:30PM EST) that the Post finally updated its
article, changing the headline to the more muted “Russian operation hacked a
Vermont utility, showing risk to U.S. electrical grid security, officials say”
and changed the body of the article to note “Burlington Electric said in a
statement that the company detected a malware code used in the Grizzly Steppe
operation in a laptop that was not connected to the organization’s grid
systems. The firm said it took immediate action to isolate the laptop and alert
federal authorities.” Yet, other parts of the article, including a later
sentence claiming that multiple computers at the utility had been breached,
remained intact.
The following morning, nearly 11 hours after changing the headline
and rewriting the article to indicate that the grid itself was never breached
and the “hack” was only an isolated laptop with malware, the Post still had not
appended any kind of editorial note to indicate that it had significantly changed the
focus of the article.
This is significant, as one driving force of fake news is that as
much of60% of
the links shared on social media are shared based on the title alone, with the
sharer not actually reading the article itself. Thus, the title assigned to an
article becomes the story itself and the Post’s incorrect title meant that the
story that spread virally through the national echo chamber was that the
Russians had hacked into the US power grid.
Only after numerous outlets called out the Post’s changes did the
newspaper finally append an
editorial note at the very bottom of the article more than half a day later
saying “An earlier version of this story incorrectly said that Russian hackers
had penetrated the U.S. electric grid. Authorities say there is no indication
of that so far. The computer at Burlington Electric that was hacked was not
attached to the grid.”
Yet, even this correction is not a true reflection of public facts
as known. The utility indicated only that a laptop was found to contain malware
that has previously been associated with Russian hackers. As manypointed out, the
malware in question is actually available for purchase online, meaning anyone
could have used it and its mere presence is not a guarantee of Russian
government involvement. Moreover, a malware infection can come from many
sources, including visiting malicious websites and thus the mere presence of
malware on a laptop computer does not necessarily indicate that Russian
government hackers launched a coordinated hacking campaign to penetrate that
machine - the infection could have come from something as simple as an employee
visiting an infected website on a work computer.
Moreover, just as with the Santa Claus and the dying child story,
the Post story went viral and was widely reshared, leading to embarrassing
situations like CNBC tweeting out the story and then having to go back
and retract the
story.
Particularly
fascinating that the original Post story mentioned that there were only two
major power utilities in Vermont and that Burlington Electric was one of them,
meaning it would have been easy to call both companies for comment. However,
while the article mentions contacting DHS for comment, there is no mention of
any kind that the Post reached out to either of the two utilities for comment.
Given that Burlington issued its formal statement denying the Post’s claims
just an hour and a half later, this would suggest that had the Post reached out
to the company it likely could have corrected its story prior to publication.
When I
reached out to Kris Coratti, Vice President of Communications and Events for
the Washington Post for comment, she responded that regarding the headline
change, “Headlines aren’t written by story authors. When editors realized it
overreached, as happens from time to time with headlines, it was corrected.”
She also indicated that posting the editor’s note at the bottom of the article
instead of the top was a mistake and indeed this was corrected shortly after my
email to her inquiring about it.
Ms.
Coratti’s response regarding the article headline is a fascinating reminder of
just how many different people and processes combine to produce a single
article in a newspaper – that contrary to popular belief, a reporter doesn’t
sit down and write a story, choose a headline and then hit “Publish” and have
the story go live on the newspaper website. Most newspapers, like the
Washington Post, either employ dedicated headline writers or have their editors
write the headlines for each piece and articles typically go through an
elaborate review process designed to catch these sorts of issues prior to
publication.
It is also interesting to note that the Post said it was an error
for the editorial note to be buried at the very bottom of the page instead of
at the top of the article, as was done for the Santa Claus story.
This reflects the chaotic nature of newsrooms in which an editorial note is
frequently added by an editor simply logging into a CMS portal and updating a
live page, rather than a templated system which automatically places all
editorial notes in the same place with the same style and formatting to ensure
consistency.
Equally
fascinating, neither Ms. Coratti nor Post Public Relations responded to any of
my remaining queries regarding the article’s fact checking process. In
particular, the Post did not respond when I asked how headlines are fact
checked and if headline writers conduct any form of fact checking to ensure
their summarized version is consistent with known facts. The Post also did not
respond to a request for comment on why it took nearly half a day from the time
the article was rewritten until an editorial note was finally appended
acknowledging that the conclusions of the original article were false and that the
article had been substantively rewritten to support a different conclusion, nor
did the Post comment on why the editor’s note was originally placed at the
bottom of the article and only moved after I inquired about its location.
Yet, perhaps
most intriguing is that, as with the Santa Claus story, the Post did not
respond to repeated requests for comment regarding how it conducts fact
checking for its stories. This marks twice in a row that the Post has chosen
not to respond in any fashion to my requests for more detail on its fact
checking processes. Given the present atmosphere in which trust in media is in
freefall and mainstream outlets like the Post are positioning themselves as the
answer to “fake news” it certainly does not advance trust in the media when
a newspaper will not even provide the most cursory of insight into how it
checks its facts.
As with the
Santa Claus story, the Post appears to have run this story without even
attempting to perform the most basic of fact checks before publication. The
original story noted that there were only two utilities in Vermont and yet the
article states that the Post only attempted to contact DHS and does not mention
any attempt to contact either of the utilities. Standard journalistic practice
would have required that the Post mention that it attempted to reach either
utility even if neither responded. The Post did not respond to a request for
comment when I asked if it had attempted to reach either utility for comment
prior to publication.
Putting this
all together, what can we learn from this? The first is that, as with the Santa
Claus and PropOrNot stories, the journalism world tends to rely far more on
trust than fact checking. When one news outlet runs a story, the rest of the
journalism world tends to follow suit, each writing their own version of the
story without ever going back to the original sources for verification. In
short – once a story enters the journalism world it spreads without further
restraint as each outlet assumes that the one before performed the necessary
fact checking.
The second is that the news media is overly dependent on
government sources. Glenn Greenwald raises the fantastic point that
journalists must be more cautious in treating the word of governments as
absolute truth. Indeed, a certain fraction of the world’s false and
misleading news actually comes from the mouths of government spokespeople. Yet,
in the Post’s case, it appears that a government source tipped off the post
about a sensational story of Russians hacking the US power grid and instead of
reaching out to the utilities themselves or gathering further detail, the Post
simply published the story as fed to them by the government officials.
The third is
that breaking news is a source of a tremendous amount of false and misleading
news as rumors and falsehoods spread like wildfire in the absence of additional
information. Top tier newspapers like the Washington Post are supposed to be a
bulwark against these falsehoods, by not publishing anything until it has been
thoroughly fact checked against multiple sources. Yet, it appears this is not
the case – in the rush to be the first to break a story and not be scooped,
reporters even at the nation’s most prestigious news outlets will take
shortcuts and rush a story out the door. What would have happened in the Post
had waited another day or two to collect responses from all involved, including
Burlington Electric? It would have avoided publishing false information, but it
also likely would have been scooped by another newspaper who wanted to be the
first to break the story.
Indeed,
“breaking news” is a tremendous problem for mainstream outlets in which they
frequently end up propagating “fake news” in their rush to be the first to
break a story. In a world beset by false and misleading news, do top tier news
outlets have a professional responsibility to step back from breaking stories and
only report on them after all details are known and they have had an
opportunity to speak with all parties involved and understand more definitively
what has happened? Financially this would likely be devastating in a
share-first click-first world in which to the victor go the advertising
dollars, but it would seem the only way to truly stop “fake news” from
spreading.