“…By considering sociocultural factors, researchers can move beyond a descriptive—and often Anglocentric—understanding of online propaganda production and distribution, reaching more comprehensive conclusions regarding the prominence and significance of specific platforms, actors, and diffusion patterns across different national and subnational context (Camargo and Simon, 2022 ). Supply-side scholars can, therefore, enhance their findings by incorporating these factors into their investigations, thus also responding to recent calls numerous researchers have made to ground online propaganda studies in history, society, culture, and politics to avoid neglecting the role race, ethnicity, language, colonial legacy, gender, and class have in this phenomenon (e.g., Siegel, 2020 ; Kreiss, 2021 ; Kuo and Marwick, 2021 ; Nguỹen et al, 2022 ).…”