A month before the 2016 US election, a computer game featuring Hillary Clinton deleting emails, taking money from Middle Eastern countries, and throwing the US Constitution surfaced on several internet platforms, according to a CNN investigation .
Several Russians with murky ties to the Internet Research Agency (IRA), the Kremlin-backed " troll factory " that special counsel Robert Mueller indicted last month, were reportedly behind the creation of the game called "Hilltendo."
The game is the most recent example of how Russians tried to sway public opinion in the US during the 2016 election.
CNN said it scoured internet records and analyzed code to determine the origins of the game and the identities of those responsible for spreading it.Although the creators tried to make it go viral online by sharing the game through a handful of user accounts on Twitter, Imgur, and Reddit, they ultimately weren't very successful. CNN said the creators claimed the game, which is no longer available online, was played fewer than 19,000 times.
A line-by-line analysis of the game's code by CNN and several cybersecurity experts revealed that it was embedded with Facebook and Google tracking software, suggesting that the game's creators could have been trying to track who was playing their game in an attempt to direct targeted advertisements their way.
On September 9, 2016, the websites Hilltendo.com and PlayWithHillary.com were both registered online, per the CNN report. Although the registration information for the former was hidden by a proxy, CNN was able to determine that someone named Aleksandr Skripnikov registered the latter from St. Petersburg, Russia.
The Internet Research Agency also operated out of St. Petersburg during that time.
Hilltendo featured three levels, according to CNN, which exhibited specific themes related to real controversies that plagued Clinton's campaign:
Mueller's team is also looking into whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russia in their interference efforts, as well as whether Trump has obstructed justice during the course of the probe.
NEW: Russians released anti-Clinton video game weeks before the 2016 presidential election. One of the games levels: "Help Hillary delete as many classified emails as possible before she is caught."
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- Donie O'Sullivan (@donie)
March 8, 2018
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