National Post (National Edition)

Facebook to fight political propaganda

- The Associated Press

FAKE NEWS

BARBARA ORTUTAY NEW YORK • Facebook Inc. is acknowledg­ing that government­s or other malicious non-state actors are using its network to influence political sentiment in ways that could affect national elections.

It’s a long way from CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s assertion in November that it was “pretty crazy” to think false news on Facebook influenced the U.S. presidenti­al election. It’s also a major sign that the world’s biggest social network is continuing to grapple with its outsized role in how the world communicat­es.

In a paper posted online on Thursday, Facebook researcher­s and its chief security officer said the firm will monitor the efforts of those who try to hurt “civic discourse” on its service, whether government­s or other groups. It is also looking to identify fake accounts, and says it will notify people if their accounts have been targeted by such cyberattac­kers.

“(We) have had to expand our security focus from traditiona­l abusive behaviour, such as account hacking, malware, spam and financial scams, to include more subtle and insidious forms of misuse, including attempts to manipulate civic discourse and deceive people,” the report, titled “Informatio­n Operations and Facebook,” states.

The report defined “informatio­n operations” as any actions taken by government­s or other actors to “distort domestic or foreign political sentiment” to achieve a strategic purpose. Such operations can include the disseminat­ion of false news and disinforma­tion and the use of fake-account networks aimed at manipulati­ng opinion through a variety of means.

Using the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election as an example, Facebook said it uncovered “several situations” where malicious actors used social media to “share informatio­n stolen from other sources, such as email accounts, with the intent of harming the reputation of specific political targets.”

The company did not name the actors or the victims, but it said its data “does not contradict” a January report by the U.S. Director of National Intelligen­ce that Russia tried to meddle with the U.S. election.

Jonathan Albright, a professor who studies data journalism at Elon University in North Carolina, urged journalist­s and others in February to look not just at the role of Facebook in spreading false or misleading informatio­n, but also at the sources of such informatio­n. That is, to attempt to identify both the producers of this material and those who spread it using social networks and other means.

Facebook’s paper addresses the amplifiers of such content — the fake accounts that “like” and share false news stories, for example. The company has also announced steps to support legitimate journalism and news literacy. But the paper does not delve into ideas about attacking false news and propaganda at the source, including by banning such content.

Currently, Facebook users who want to share an article that has been debunked by outside fact-checkers, for example, are able to do so after they get a warning from Facebook. Facebook has long held that it does not want to be the arbiter of truth — that it wants its users to decide for themselves (within limits of its terms of service) what they want to read and post.

But balancing a desire not to censor with weeding out state-sponsored propaganda has been challengin­g.

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