The Philippine Star

Facebook removes ‘spam network’ in Phl

- By JANVIC MATEO

Social media company Facebook has taken down over 100 pages and accounts belonging to a “spam network” discovered to have been making money by taking advantage of Filipino users.

A total of 95 pages and 39 accounts with political and entertainm­ent content were removed from the social media platform yesterday morning “for encouragin­g people to visit low quality websites that contain little substantiv­e content and are full of disruptive ads.”

Facebook said the accounts that were removed belong to a spam network that is likely a coordinate­d behavior of an individual or individual­s working as a group.

The full list of removed accounts was not released, but included those of apparent supporters of President Duterte and Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos,

including Duterte Media, Duterte sa Pagbabago Bukas, DDS, Duterte Phenomenon and Manang Imee.

Also removed were accounts using names and images of popular celebritie­s, as well as more generic “news” pages such as News Media Trends and Pilipinas Daily News.

“These pages ranged from political to entertainm­ent content, but all were sharing links to the same advertisin­g click farms off Facebook,” said the company.

“We’re monitoring for a range of abuses on Facebook, including spam behavior, and will remove any account or page that breaks our rules,” it added.

Malacañang was unfazed by Facebook’s decision to purge pro-Duterte pages that violated its policies.

“Facebook must have its rules and regulation­s. If they are implementi­ng that, then that’s their own rule,” presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said at a press briefing yesterday.

“Now, if the concern is, there will be no more avenues, there are so many avenues. We have Twitter, Instagram and many others where the advocates can express themselves in support of this administra­tion,” he added.

Some 4.8 million users followed at least one of the removed pages, according to Facebook.

“We don’t want this kind of behavior on Facebook and we’re investing heavily in both people and technology to keep bad content off our services,” it said.

“This is some of the most important work being done at Facebook. This takedown is a small step in the right direction, and we will continue working to find and remove more bad content,” it added.

The takedown of Philippine pages follows a similar move of Facebook in the United States.

Earlier this month, the company said it had removed 559 pages and 251 accounts for consistent­ly violating rules against spam and coordinate­d inauthenti­c behavior.

It discovered that the spam networks were using sensationa­l political content to earn money by building an audience and driving traffic to their websites.

“The people behind the activity also post the same click bait posts in dozens of Facebook groups, often hundreds of times in a short period, to drum up traffic for their websites. And they often use their fake accounts to generate fake likes and shares,” said Facebook’s head of cyber security policy Nathaniel Gleicher and product manager Oscar Rodriguez in a joint post about the purge.

 ??  ?? NAM JUNE PAIK IN MANILA: United States Ambassador Sung Kim (fifth from left) leads the performanc­e piece One for Violin at the opening rites for the exhibit of the late artist Nam June Paik, at the Leon Gallery on Oct. 22. The exhibit, done in collaborat­ion with the Gagosian Gallery, is the first in Southeast Asia for the ‘father of video art.’ From left are curator Lisa Nakpil; collector Marcel Crespo; Nick Simunovic of Gagosian Asia; Ken Hakuta, the artist’s nephew; Jaime Ponce de Leon of León Gallery; curator Jon Huffman and Lina Juntilla of León Gallery Internatio­nal.
NAM JUNE PAIK IN MANILA: United States Ambassador Sung Kim (fifth from left) leads the performanc­e piece One for Violin at the opening rites for the exhibit of the late artist Nam June Paik, at the Leon Gallery on Oct. 22. The exhibit, done in collaborat­ion with the Gagosian Gallery, is the first in Southeast Asia for the ‘father of video art.’ From left are curator Lisa Nakpil; collector Marcel Crespo; Nick Simunovic of Gagosian Asia; Ken Hakuta, the artist’s nephew; Jaime Ponce de Leon of León Gallery; curator Jon Huffman and Lina Juntilla of León Gallery Internatio­nal.

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