London became the first city in the world to mount a public, AI-powered fightback against coordinated disinformation infrastructure.
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Bot farms timed to ULEZ policy dates. A paid operation, not organic public dissent.
32 Facebook pages simultaneously rebranding the day after the Mayoral election. Zombie infrastructure — pre-built and waiting.
A Vietnam-based AI content farm: 42 pages, 1.25 million followers, CIB confirmed.
London became the first city in the world to mount a public, AI-powered fightback against coordinated disinformation infrastructure.
Ariadne’s monetisation analysis gave the Mayor specific, documented language: the “outrage economy” and the “division dividend.” When the Mayor used these terms at Cambridge, he had the data behind them. Named infrastructure is harder to deny than a political grievance.
The 32-page simultaneous content switch gave the communications team enough evidence to publicly call out the network as pre-existing infrastructure — before it could simulate genuine grassroots activism in future campaigns. Naming it publicly was the response.
Ariadne traced a Vietnam-based operation — 42 Facebook pages, 1.25 million followers, AI-generated content used as an audience hook then injected with far-right material. The Mayor cited it directly at Cambridge. The Guardian and FT led on it. That attribution only held because the underlying evidence was solid.
“The same people attacking the capital have already started targeting other cities around the world. And in a few years’ time I think we’ll look back on London as the canary in the coalmine. But I hope we’ll also see it as the place where the fightback began.”