Facebook,
Instagram Delete Dozens of Russia-Linked Accounts
3
March, 2018
On
Tuesday, Facebook announced that it had deleted 70 Facebook and 65
Instagram mostly Russian-language accounts owned by Internet Research
Agency (IRA), the Russian group accused of interfering in the 2016 US
presidential election.
In
addition, 138 Facebook pages controlled by IRA were also closed
down. Many of those pages also ran ads, which were removed.
In
a Tuesday
blog post by Facebook
chief security officer Alex Stamos, he wrote, "Of the pages that
had content, the vast majority of them (95 percent) were
in Russian — targeted either at people living
in Russia or Russian-speakers around the world including
from nearby countries like Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan and
Ukraine."
He
adds that "the IRA has repeatedly used complex networks
of unauthentic accounts to decide and manipulate people
whom use Facebook, including before, during and after the
2016 US presidential elections."
The
blog post notes that the accounts and pages were deleted from the
platform not because of their content, which included
information on domestic and international political issues
as well as information on Russian culture and tourism,
but merely because they were controlled by the IRA.
In
a post by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg published Tuesday, he
wrote that the accounts had been closed because of their aim to
"manipulate people in the US, Europe and Russia."
Though of course, if 95 percent of the accounts deleted
were in the Russian language, their target audience in the
US and Europe must have been relatively small.
"Security
isn't a problem you ever fully solve. Organizations like the IRA
are sophisticated adversaries who are constantly evolving, but we'll
keep improving our techniques to stay ahead — especially
when it comes to protecting the integrity of elections,"
he added in his Facebook post.
Earlier
this year, a federal grand jury indicted 13 Russian national and
three Russian groups, including the IRA, for running Eastern
European and Russian "troll farms." The indictments come
as part of US special counsel Robert Mueller's
investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016
presidential election.
Mueller has indicted former officials from US President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign Paul Manafort and Rick Gates for tax fraud and related charges related to their work as lobbyists for Ukrainian politicians before joining the campaign. Michael Flynn, briefly Trump's national security adviser, and George Papadopoulos, a campaign adviser, have pleaded guilty to making false statements in the investigation. No charges of conspiracy or collusion with Russia have been leveled against members of the president's campaign, and Moscow and Trump have consistently denied that any such collusion occurred.
Last
month, Trump called Mueller's ongoing investigation a "witchhunt."
Mark Zuckerberg
6 hours ago
Today we're taking an important step to protect the integrity of elections around the world by taking down more than 270 pages and accounts operated by a Russian organization called the Internet Research Agency (IRA). Most of our actions against the IRA to date have been to prevent them from interfering in foreign elections. This update is about taking down their pages targeting people living in Russia. This Russian agency has repeatedly acted deceptively and tried to manipul...
See more
"A
total WITCH HUNT with massive conflicts of interest!"
Trump tweeted March 19.
Zuckerberg
has previously dismissed allegations that his platform was used
by foreign agents to influence the presidential election.
The popular social media platform, however, was recently drawn again
into the election morass after after recent allegations
that data and political consultancy firm Cambridge Analytica received
information about Facebook users through a personality app
developed by Alexander Kogan, a Cambridge University researcher.
Media
reports state that the firm worked for US President Donald
Trump's 2016 campaign as well as the Brexit campaign
to develop a mechanism that would allow it to predict and
influence voter behavior. The analytics contractor reportedly gained
access to private data from 50 million Facebook users.
Facebook,
Cambridge Analytica and the data-mining company's corporate parent,
the SCL Group, are being accused of misrepresenting their app
as an academic research tool instead of a way to obtain
Facebook users' personal data.
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