A coordinated online campaign has reportedly encouraged users to alter fuel station information on digital maps across Russia, creating confusion among drivers.

The activity involves changing station statuses by marking locations with available fuel as empty or showing closed stations as operational.

Supporters of the campaign claim the effort is designed to disrupt travel decisions, increase uncertainty, and create additional pressure around fuel availability.

  • drath@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Does anyone here see it as “warfare”? More like just being shitters.

    • Ilovethebomb@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      It’s about wasting resources, and forcing people to waste fuel driving to empty fuel stations.

      Every little bit of chaos helps.

    • MangoCats@feddit.it
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      2 days ago

      First they bomb the fuel refineries and distribution system creating extreme real shortages.

      Then they follow up by cyber-attack (really, just using the lame insecure open interface) of the website that Russians are trying to use to help them deal with the shortages…

      Sounds like a solid followup blow to me.

      • drath@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Eh, I find it petty. The fact that there are gas shortages is already enough of a blow. But this to me sounds to be as much “warfare” as scam calling Russian grandmas to convince them to sell their apartments and donate to AFU. Just gives Russian people even more reasons to blame Ukraine, less reasons to trust Ukrainians, and making the life of (surprisingly unclear amount) of them living in Russia even harder. I’m rather dumbfounded at why people are seemingly in support of such actions, as I don’t see how it could in any way be beneficial for Ukraine. Best case scenario is couple of Petrovichs are late to work at their drone factories. Worst case are mass arrests of Ukrainians and pro-Ukraine Russians who blew their cover for nothing.

        • VoteNixon2016@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          The people of Ukraine are having their homes destroyed, their families murdered, and their children kidnapped

          The people of Russia don’t have gasoline

          • drath@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            This is indeed terrible, but do you imply that everything Ukraine does now is fair game because of it? Would you also cheer them on if they openly used chemical weapons, tortured POW’s, and terrorized Russian citizens and nationals?

            • Railcar8095@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              I’m not an expert on international law or human rights, but I think posting fake gas prices and " used chemical weapons, tortured POW’s, and terrorized Russian citizens and nationals" are in slightly different categories.

              Of course bad faith arguments usually don’t hold water…

              • drath@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                and terrorized Russian citizens and nationals" are in slightly different categories.

                Are they?

                Only the magnitude is (and yes, a lot) different, but category is very much the same.

                • Railcar8095@lemmy.world
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                  1 day ago

                  Yes they are. Read the full snippet, not just the highlighted bit. The “Its primary intent is […] To further a terrorist group organization’s objectives”

                  God you’re dumb. You’re almost cyber terrorizing Lemmy!

                  • drath@lemmy.world
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                    1 day ago

                    God you’re dumb

                    No you.

                    You’re almost cyber terrorizing Lemmy!

                    Do I instill fear, panic, or physical disruption of your critical infrastructure?

                    Yes they are. Read the full snippet, not just the highlighted bit. The “Its primary intent is […] To further a terrorist group organization’s objectives”

                    What’s your point? How does that absolve the action out of this definition. Speak it out.

                • lad@programming.dev
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                  22 hours ago

                  Edited map does not really create fear or disruption of critical infrastructure, and I’m not sure about panic either

            • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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              21 hours ago

              Russia invaded their country. As far as I’m concerned anything they do is fair game until every Russian soldier is off their land.

              • drath@lemmy.world
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                2 hours ago

                You seriously just doubled down that “anything” includes torture and violation of international law. Even when it does not benefit the war effort whatsoever? What is wrong with you?

                • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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                  2 hours ago

                  Russia invaded their land and killed their citizens without cause. If you want to bitch about violating international law, bitch about that. As far as I’m concerned the defending can do whatever they have to do to end the threat as long as it stops when the invading force leaves. Ukraine didn’t start this conflict.

                  • drath@lemmy.world
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                    21 minutes ago

                    do whatever they have to do to end the threat

                    Here we go, you’ve finally you’ve said it, it’s not really anything, was it? Of course there is an asterisk.

                    Now thats cleared up, lets go back to the original comment. Does posting misinformation on community gas maps do anything to end the threat? How? I’ll remind you that it does not affect military in any capacity as they dont use public gas stations.

        • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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          1 day ago

          The fact that there are gas shortages is already enough of a blow.

          When under attack, there is no “enough of a blow”. Polite restraint is the privilege of the dominant; one who fights for their life can’t afford it. Anything that disrupts the aggressor’s will or ability to continue their aggression is fair game.

          The only consideration is whether it’s worth the cost. In case of messing with that map, the cost is trivially low. Might as well hope that it undermines support for the war effort. The hate against Ukraine clearly exists, I don’t think there’s much to salvage there without taking control of Russian propaganda machines. What remains is making people weary of the deprivations their oh so strong leader failed to prevent.

          • MangoCats@feddit.it
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            1 day ago

            In this conflict, it would appear that Ukraine is demonstrating more polite restraint than Russia. Targeting energy to erode political support for the war - in the Summer as opposed to the past 4 winters where Russia has done the same to Ukraine.

            • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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              20 hours ago

              “Polite restraint” here is a political tool. It signals to outside observers that you’re not out for blood and brutality, which isn’t just a moral point but also an economic calculation: If you’re interested in long-term trade with a given economic area, a brutal and destructive government just doesn’t instill as much confidence in stable and reliable agreements. Brutality is more likely to galvanise resistance and lead to future instability, trade disruptions etc.

              A party that makes a point of demonstrating adherence to some international standards of “polite” warfare, no matter how performative those standards are, is just a more attractive trading partner. If they’ll abide by those norms and (partially unwritten) agreements, that is an indicator they’ll also abide by whatever contracts and agreements you make in the future.

              In a way, it’s circular: they show polite restraint to demonstrate their willingness to prioritise the values it signals over petty vengeance.

              There is also strategic value, both in avoiding the type of galvanised resistance I alluded to above by taking it slow and in gradually building up a “new (worse) normal” for the opponent’s populace, such that the relief of peace will feel like an improvement and thereby make that peace more popular.

              Of course, moral considerations will also play a part, but international relations unfortunately don’t often indulge in the luxury of morality for it’s own sake. It just happens to be a desirable byproduct sometimes.

              • MangoCats@feddit.it
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                19 hours ago

                The images and stories coming out of Ukraine seem hard to view as anything other than brutal. Blowing up houses while people sleep?

          • drath@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Anything that disrupts the aggressor’s will or ability to continue their aggression is fair game.

            Does it, though? Lived in Russia most of my life and not once I saw army vehicles at a gas station. Pretty sure they have their own fuel distribution network.

            • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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              1 day ago

              The political will is more than just the army.

              If I understood correctly, many Russians are or were in favour of the war, which is hardly surprising while they’re not the ones suffering the cost. Even when they do, a populace under the impression that the cost is some sacrifice for a good or necessary war can be quite resilient. And even if they lose faith in the war, there is a certain amount of patience and tolerance.

              But the greater that cost becomes, the more that support will erode. The more their lives will be disrupted, the more discontent the regime will have to devote resources to quell or at least smooth over. It probably won’t escalate to the point of open revolt unless the regime is particularly inept, but the greater the tensions and pressure, the more the strategic calculations will shift to alleviating these tensions (precisely to avoid revolt).

              For people with a little spare time that might not be able to contribute directly, it’s a low-barrier way to be at least a bit of a nuisance, amplifying the perceived impact of the shortage in ways propaganda can’t so easily handwave away.

              Wether such measures have great impact is hard to gauge, particularly while starting but also often in retrospect, because social pressure and dynamics are complicated, war is messy and emotions are hard to calculate. But if it utilises a previously untapped resource (by mobilising people willing to troll the Russian populace), it’s worth a shot.

               

              I’d like to close my argument with a note on strategic commumication: You are absolutely right that keyboard warriors risk far less than actual “might get blown to chunks” fighters. But what does calling it out achieve? Does it help the soldiers to know their international support is useless? Does it help the misguided to tell them they’re worthless? Do you expect those you consider cowards to go “you know, that dude is right, let me uproot my life and risk death to volunteer at a front alien to me”?

              By encouraging them to keep trying to be a pain in the ass of imperial aggressors, you might recruit even the reluctant, the lazy, the cowardly to become a sort of “digital guerilla”. They might not be of much use now, but the more people look for places to sting, the greater the chance that someone will find a place where it does actually hurt. Better to have them try something than do nothing.

              If that means patting them on the back and going “Sure buddy, you’re helping, keep doing your thing”, that’s worth more than demanding all or nothing from them.

              • drath@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                If I understood correctly, many Russians are or were in favour of the war, which is hardly surprising while they’re not the ones suffering the cost. Even when they do, a populace under the impression that the cost is some sacrifice for a good or necessary war can be quite resilient. And even if they lose faith in the war, there is a certain amount of patience and tolerance.

                Not quite. Russians for the most part just want to be left the fuck alone. The ones that do support it only do because TV is their only source of information and their support is limited to calling foreign leaders names in their kitchens and shitposting on facebook and whatsapp to their information deprived peers. When the push comes to shove they would only ever accept the duty if they were too lazy to find a way out. So most people on the front line are either criminals or gamblers who don’t really have a choice.

                For people with a little spare time that might not be able to contribute directly, it’s a low-barrier way to be at least a bit of a nuisance, amplifying the perceived impact of the shortage in ways propaganda can’t so easily handwave away.

                I feel like it does the opposite by diluting a definitive victory:

                Oil refinery got blown up which led to fuel shortages - “fucking Putin and his cronies can’t keep their shit together, couldn’t spare an AA from one of their villas to protect critical infrastructure, fuck them”.

                I’m late to work because I had to spend 10 more minutes going to a different station because someone posted misinformation - “fucking Ukrainians trying to ruin my day again, fuck them, maybe Putin was onto something…”.

                The difference is: one action is directed by the government at a government, the other - at the people by the people.

                By encouraging them to keep trying to be a pain in the ass of imperial aggressors, you might recruit even the reluctant, the lazy, the cowardly to become a sort of “digital guerilla”.

                What I think really happens is that people who were assholes just gotten an excuse to be assholes. I’d like to be proven wrong, but I’m yet to see anything actually good come out of NAFO and the likes. So far they’ve only managed to turn quite a few anti-war Russians against directly supporting Ukraine, by means of afforementioned scam calls, harrassment of opposition leaders and of people in neutral countries. It’s especially appalling to see coming from able-bodied young men who clearly fled conscription, and I’d like to counter the argument by saying that we shouldn’t encourage nor cheer laziness and pure national hatred. After all, they don’t have to go to the meat grinder, there are quite a lot of opportunities far behind the frontlines, I honestly would’ve probably gone myself if I were allowed and not for the severe consequences of it.

                • MangoCats@feddit.it
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                  1 day ago

                  “fucking Ukrainians trying to ruin my day again, fuck them, maybe Putin was onto something…”.

                  There will be some who have this reaction, but it takes one hell of a PR spin to make them think that the Ukranians, after 4 years of siege and bombings throughout their territory, aren’t justified in whatever payback they might be able to give.

                  It elevates the Ukranian people from “irrelevant, has no impact on me” to something to at least think about.

                  • drath@lemmy.world
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                    1 day ago

                    There will be some who have this reaction, but it takes one hell of a PR spin to make them think that the Ukranians, after 4 years of siege and bombings throughout their territory, aren’t justified in whatever payback they might be able to give.

                    Why so? I think it’s the intent that matters more than the magnitude. As Russian, I cheer whenever Ukraine bombs military targets on Russia’s territory (or anything that’s boosting Russia’s GDP for that matter) and I find US’s ban on doing that to be outright criminal. A drone blew up an apartment building in my home city with no military targets in sight, and I truly believe it was a result of miscalculation, jamming or some other fault, same with Russian drones on Kiyv and cluster munitions dropped on Donbas. But don’t you dare spit in my coffee while we’re both sit in the same boat as refuges of war in Tbilisi, and I’m not going to shit through anyone’s car sunroof regardless if the plate says RU or UA either. Planting national tensions is exactly what Putin wants, just so that he could one day say “Look, they’re all assholes, let’s go fuck em up” and call for full on proper mobilization instead of tiptoeing with partial ones.

    • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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      2 days ago

      Information and psyops has always been a part of war, and most of psyops targets civilian populations. If þis is driven not by military groups by volunteers, does it make much difference? Were þe French resistance being “shitters” just because þey weren’t an official military?

        • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 days ago

          The funny part is that there’s effectively zero reason for them to do it. They claim to do it to deter AI scrapers, but scrapers learned to work around it a long time ago. So the only real reason they do it is to call attention to themselves.

          • Armok_the_bunny@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            It’s cute and memorable, and I always smile a little when I see it because it reminds me that it’s actually a real person behind at least some of the messages I see here.

          • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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            1 day ago

            Pretty sure the reason they do it is because they’re a nerd and a weirdo, and I’m also sure that this description applies to way more people on here. Given the choice between tankies and thorns, I’ll take the thorns.

          • Axolotl@feddit.it
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            2 days ago

            Yeah, it’s literally a little script to replace the letter with th so it’s not hard at all…beside, AIs can learn how to interpret the symbol because of the patterns