Baltimore Sun

Twitter deletes 23K accounts for spreading misinforma­tion

- By Kelvin Chan

LONDON — Twitter has removed a vast network of accounts that it says is linked to the Chinese government and was pushing false informatio­n favorable to the country’s communist rulers. Beijing denied involvemen­t Friday and said the company should instead take down accounts smearing China.

The U.S. social media company suspended 23,750 accounts that were posting pro-Beijing narratives, and another 150,000 accounts dedicated to retweeting and amplifying those messages.

The network was engaged “in a range of coordinate­d and manipulate­d activities” in predominan­tly Chinese languages, including praise for China’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic and “deceptive narratives” about Hong Kong pro-democracy protests, the company said.

Most had little to no followers and failed to get much attention. The accounts were suspended under Twitter’s manipulati­on policies, which ban artificial amplificat­ion and suppressio­n of informatio­n.

Twitter and other social media services like Facebook are blocked in China.

China denied involvemen­t.

“It holds no water at all to equate China’s response to the epidemic with disinforma­tion,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said at a daily news briefing in Beijing on Friday. She said she wasn’t aware of Twitter’s takedown and the reason behind it.

Twitter also removed more than 1,000 accounts linked to a Russian media website engaging in state-backed political propaganda in Russian, and a network of 7,340 fake or compromise­d accounts used for “cheerleadi­ng” the ruling party in Turkey.

Turkey’s presidenti­al communicat­ions director, Fahrettin Altun, said allegation­s that the accounts were fake are “untrue” and called Twitter’s move an attempt to smear Turkey’s government and the ruling party.

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