[JS] CopyCop Deepens Its Playbook with New Websites and Targets: Russian fake-news network back in action with 200+ new sites
[JS] CopyCop Deepens Its Playbook with New Websites and Targets: Russian fake-news network back in action with 200+ new sites

CopyCop expands Russian influence ops with 300+ fake websites targeting the US, France, Canada & more—using AI, deepfakes, and GRU-backed infrastructure.

Since March 2025, Insikt Group has observed CopyCop (also known as Storm-1516), a Russian covert influence network, creating at least 200 new fictional media websites targeting the United States (US), France, and Canada, in addition to websites impersonating media brands and political parties and movements in France, Canada, and Armenia. CopyCop has also established a regionalized network of websites posing as a fictional fact-checking organization publishing content in Turkish, Ukrainian, and Swahili, languages never featured by the network before. Including the 94 websites targeting Germany reported by Insikt Group in February 2025, this amounts to over 300 websites established by CopyCop’s operators in the year to date, marking a significant expansion from our initial reporting on the network in 2024, and with many yet to be publicly documented.
These websites are very likely operated by John Mark Dougan with support from the Moscow-based Center for Geopolitical Expertise (CGE) and the Main Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation (GRU). CopyCop uses these websites as infrastructure to disseminate influence content targeting pro-Western leadership and publish artificial intelligence (AI)-generated content with pro-Russian and anti-Ukrainian themes in support of Russia’s offensive operations in the global information environment.
While the network’s scope in terms of target languages and countries has expanded, its primary objectives almost certainly remain unchanged: undermining support for Ukraine and exacerbating political fragmentation in Western countries backing Ukraine. Insikt Group has also observed CopyCop engaging in additional secondary objectives like advancing Russia’s geopolitical objectives in its broader sphere of influence, such as Armenia and Moldova. CopyCop’s narratives and content in support of these objectives are routinely amplified by an ecosystem of social media influencers in addition to other Russian influence networks like Portal Kombat and InfoDefense.
Similar to its objectives, CopyCop’s tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) remain broadly unchanged, with marginal improvements designed to strengthen the network’s reach, resilience, and credibility. Tactics and techniques used for content dissemination typically include deepfakes, lengthy dossiers intending to embarrass targets, and fake interviews of alleged whistleblowers making claims about political leaders in NATO member states like the US, France, and Germany. Insikt Group also identified new evidence that CopyCop uses self-hosted, uncensored large language models (LLMs) based on Meta’s Llama 3 open-source models to generate AI content rather than relying on Western AI service providers.
Relative to other Russian influence networks, CopyCop’s impact remains significant: targeted influence content promoted by its websites and an ecosystem of pro-Russian social media influencers and so-called “journalists” regularly obtains high rates of organic engagement across multiple social media platforms, and has a precedent for breaking into mainstream political discourse. Persistently identifying and publicly exposing these networks should remain a priority for governments, journalists, and researchers seeking to defend democratic institutions from Russian influence.