Citations:Kremlebot


 * 2017: Issie Lapowsky, “Facebook May Have more Russian Troll Farms to Worry About,” Wired, September 8:
 * "If Facebook has only identified ads purchased by one of these companies, there needs to be an immediate investigation into activity by everything in this &apos;Kremlebot&apos; empire," Pilipenko says. "This may just be the tip of the iceberg."
 * 2018: Tamara Shcheglova, et al, “Methodology for Measuring Polarization of Political Discourse: Case of Comparing Oppositional and Patriotic Discourse in Online Social Networks,” in Ilya Bychkov, et al, eds., Network Algorithms, Data Mining, and Applications, Springer Proceedings in Mathematics & Statistics, NET, Moscow, Cham, Switzerland: Springer, ISBN 978-3-030-37156-2, p 226:
 * Separately the supporters of power are characterized by “Kremlebot”, “troll”, “Edinaya Russia” etc.
 * 2019: James Grady, Condor: The Short Takes, New York: MysteriousPress.com/Open Road, ISBN 978-1-5040-5649-6:
 * The ‘Trolls From Ogino [sic].’ Kremlebots. Officially the Internet Research Agency. Your FBI missed it a’coming, but kremlebots and their parallel cadres keep getting bigger and ‘better’ and nastier.
 * 2020: Basskaran Nair, et al, A Primer on Policy Communication in Kazakhstan, Singapore: Palgrave Pivot, ISBN 978-981-15-0609-3, p 37:
 * Kazakhs call these comments, Nurbots. The name is reminiscent of their Russian counterparts, Kremlebots, that is Internet users who get paid by the state to leave comments and create pro-government content.