The Press

Facebook’s Russia problem still lingers

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UNITED STATES: Facebook said yesterday that it removed more than 200 Facebook pages and Instagram accounts controlled by the Russian organisati­on that had meddled in the US 2016 presidenti­al election, most of which were in Russian, a sign that manipulati­on on Facebook continued months after a purge.

The majority-Russian-language pages and accounts, created by the Kremlin-linked Internet Research Agency, also called the IRA, mostly targeted Russians, Ukrainians and other former Soviet states, and had amassed roughly 1.5 million followers across Facebook and its Instagram unit.

Facebook said it removed the accounts and pages because the Internet Research Agency has lied about its identity in creating accounts, including some that purported to be American around the election. The content of the majority-Russian accounts was not problemati­c, Facebook’s chief security officer Alex Stamos wrote in a blog post.

‘‘Security isn’t a problem you ever fully solve,’’ Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a post on his personal Facebook page. ‘‘Organisati­ons 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.’’

The primarily Russianlan­guage content included entertainm­ent and posts praising Russian President Vladimir Putin and the beauty of Russian cities. The IRA accounts also spent about $167,000 on Facebook and Instagram advertisem­ents since January 2015, according to Stamos’ blog post.

‘‘We know that the IRA – and other bad actors seeking to abuse Facebook – are always changing their tactics to hide from our security team,’’ Stamos wrote. ‘‘We expect we will find more, and if we do we will take them down too.’’

Facebook’s disclosure raises broader questions about the company’s ability to catch bad actors quickly, before they can spread messages to large numbers of Facebook and Instagram users. The reference to 2015 in the company blog post suggests that at least some of the IRA pages were running during the US presidenti­al election campaign and were left out of a purge of more than 400 IRA pages that Facebook conducted in September 2017.

Those pages purged in 2017 were politicall­y oriented and written in English, with the intent to influence the US presidenti­al election and to sow divisions in American society on issues such as immigratio­n and race.

In February, Special Counsel Robert Mueller issued an indictment against the IRA that drew heavily on the agency’s activity on Facebook.

Facebook said most of the accounts shut down yesterday were created in 2016. The company did not respond to further questions about when the pages were first identified. The first version of the company’s blog post yesterday said data about the pages was compiled in April 2017. Facebook changed the date to April 2018 after The Washington Post asked about the date and said the earlier date was a typographi­cal error.

US lawmakers were quick to say the presence of the Russian accounts highlights the need for more regulation of technology companies.

‘‘Today’s disclosure of more IRA-linked accounts is evidence that the Kremlin continues to exploit platforms like Facebook to sow division, spread disinforma­tion, and influence political debates around the globe,’’ Democrat Senator Mark Warner said. ‘‘Given the scale and scope of the Kremlin’s disinforma­tion campaign, it was always clear that Russian activity on Facebook extended far beyond the 470 fake accounts and pages that the company shut down in September.’’

Zuckerberg is expected to testify next week on privacy issues stemming from the controvers­y over a Trump-affiliated data consultanc­y’s misuse of the Facebook data. The consultanc­y, Cambridge Analytica, inappropri­ately acquired informatio­n from at least 30 million Facebook users. Cambridge Analytica ran data operations for then-candidate Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. Facebook worked side by side with Cambridge Analytica in Trump’s San Antonio campaign offices, and a former employee of Cambridge Analytica’s also works at Facebook.

Facebook has been on the defensive since the Cambridge revelation­s. The company announced that it was overhaulin­g its data privacy controls, making it easier for users to control how their data is shared by putting it all on a single Facebook page. The company plans to make additional privacy-related announceme­nts.

‘‘The good news is that Facebook is gaining more and better detection of Russian influence operations,’’ said Clint Watts, a disinforma­tion expert and senior fellow at the Centre for Cyber and Homeland Security at George Washington University.

‘‘The bad news is this shows that Russia is still conducting influence operations on social media, hurting their platforms. It will be a persistent problem now and in the future, not one limited to the presidenti­al election of 2016.’’ – Washington Post

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? In this 2013 file photo, Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg at the company’s headquarte­rs in Menlo Park, California. Facebook yesterday removed pages and accounts controlled by Russian group, the Internet Research Agency.
PHOTO: AP In this 2013 file photo, Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg at the company’s headquarte­rs in Menlo Park, California. Facebook yesterday removed pages and accounts controlled by Russian group, the Internet Research Agency.

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