Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Facebook, Twitter flounder in QAnon crackdown

- By Amanda Seitz and Barbara O rt utay

CHICAGO » Facebook and Twitter promised to stop encouragin­g the growth of the baseless conspiracy theory QAnon, which fashions President Donald Trump as a secret warrior against a supposed child-traffickin­g ring run by celebritie­s and government officials, after it reached an audience of millions on their platforms this year.

But the socialmedi­a companies still aren’t enforcing even the limited restrictio­ns they’ve recently put in place to stem the tide of dangerous QA non material, a review by The Associated Press found. Both platforms have vowed to stop “suggesting” QAnon material to users, a powerful way of introducin­g QAnon to new people.

But neither has actually succeeded at that.

On Wednesday, hours after a chaotic debate between Trump and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden, a video from a QAnon account that falsely claimed Biden wore a wire to cheat during the event was trending on Twitter, for example.

Twitter is even still running ads against QAnon material, in effect profiting off the type of tweets that it has vowed to limit. In some cases Facebook is still automatica­lly directing users to follow public and secret QAnon pages or groups, the AP found.

“Their algorithm worked

to radicalize people and really gave this conspiracy theory a mega phone with which to expand,” Sophie BjorkJames, an anthropolo­gist at Vanderbilt University who studies QAnon, said of social platforms. “They are responsibl­e for shutting down that megaphone. And time and time again they are proving unwilling.”

The QAnon phenomenon sprawls across a patchwork of secret Facebook groups, Twitter accounts and YouTube videos. QAnon has been linked to real-world violence such as criminal reports of kidnapping and dangerous claims that the coronaviru­s is a hoax. But the conspiracy theory has also seeped into mainstream politics. Several Republican running for Congress this year are QAnon-friendly.

Although restricted to the backwaters of the internet for years, QAnon posts

reached millions of people via socialmedi­a this year. Interactio­ns — primarily likes and comments — with public Facebook and Instagram posts that included QAnon terms began climbing in March. By July, they received more attention than at any other point in the last year, according to an AP analysis of data from Crowd Tangle, a Facebook-owned tool that helps track material on the platforms.

That month, public posts on Facebook- owned Instagram featuring the #QAnon hashtag received an average of 1.27 million likes and comments every week, according to the analysis. Some of those posts included news stories about QAnon. But the majority of themost popular Instagram posts during July were expressing support for the conspiracy theory, President Donald Trump, or farright conservati­ve causes, the AP found.

One post that used the QAnon hashtag, which raked up nearly 20,000 likes, claimed that “no one has died from coronaviru­s.” Another was a photo of a Donald Trump that called him “One of God’s Finest Warriors.”

Twitter didn’t limit the conspiracy theory until July 21, when it announced it was kicking off 7,000 QAnon accounts and promised to stop promoting or recommendi­ng QAnon. Facebook introduced its new rules on Aug. 18, pledging to stop encouragin­g users to join QAnon groups, banning QAnon hashtags and kicking off thousands of QAnon groups that encouraged violence.

“Unfortunat­ely, itwas too late and not enough,” BjorkJames said.

The AP also discovered more than a dozen popular QAnon accounts on Twitter that collective­ly maintain a following of nearly 1.5 million users, almost all of which were recommende­d to users who followed other QAnon accounts.

And Twitter appears to be profiting from those QAnon accounts. Nearly all of the accounts the AP identified had ads showing in their feeds for big brand names that sell everything from beer to toilet paper. That doesn’t mean the brands intentiona­lly placed their ads in the feeds of the accounts, although it does suggest that Twitter isn’t preventing the ads from appearing next to QAnon material.

 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Aug. 2, 2018, a protesters holding a Q sign waits in line with others to enter a campaign rally with President Donald Trump inWilkes-Barre, Pa.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Aug. 2, 2018, a protesters holding a Q sign waits in line with others to enter a campaign rally with President Donald Trump inWilkes-Barre, Pa.

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