Los Angeles Times

Facebook bans all QAnon pages

In a sweeping content policy move, the platform links the conspiracy theory to ‘ real- world harm.’

- By Suhauna Hussain

In its most sweeping content policy decision to date, Facebook on Tuesday implemente­d a comprehens­ive ban on QAnon- related pages, groups and Instagram accounts.

The action represents a sharp escalation against purveyors of the vast conspiracy theory that baselessly claims that a shadowy, Satan- worshiping cabal of Democrats and other elites operates a child sex- traffickin­g ring.

In August, Facebook said it would remove content accounts and groups associated with QAnon only when they discussed potential violence. That initial policy led the company to remove 790 QAnon groups and restricted an additional 1,950 related to the conspiracy.

Facebook seems to be moving rapidly to enforce the new ban. Three QAnonfocus­ed groups identified by The Times that were online last week were unavailabl­e Tuesday after the announceme­nt.

In a blog post Tuesday, Facebook said that although QAnon posts may not directly promote violence, they are often nonetheles­s linked to “different forms of real- world harm.”

The company cited a barrage of fake claims in recent weeks by QAnon followers that wildfires ravaging the West Coast were started by members of leftist anarchist groups such as antifa, diverting the attention of local

officials from the important task of managing the f ires and protecting residents.

The company also noted that it began directing users to credible child- safety resources when they search for hashtags that have been coopted by QAnon supporters, such as # SaveTheChi­ldren, which refers to the false claim by conspiracy theorists that children have been kidnapped as part of the alleged human- traffickin­g ring.

But the effort may be too little, too late.

QAnon was a fringe movement when it sprouted in convoluted 4Chan posts in 2017. But the movement has swelled, bubbling into the mainstream this year and animating right- wing politics.

While Reddit and YouTube took earlier action against QAnon, Twitter and Facebook did not make moves to shut down or place limits on QAnon- linked accounts until this summer.

A Reddit executive last month told the Atlantic that the company hadn’t made any focused effort to keep QAnon off the platform. In

stead, channels where followers gathered were removed amid a broader crackdown on harassment and hate speech.

Reddit in March 2018 removed one of the original channels related to the conspiracy, r/ CBTS_ stream, for inciting violence and in September of that year banned a main forum for QAnon conspiracy theories that had about 70,000 subscriber­s.

Alex Joseph, spokesman for YouTube, said in an email that the company has since 2018 removed tens of thousands of QAnon- related videos and channels for violating the site’s hate and harassment policies. In early 2019, YouTube also aimed to reduce recommenda­tions of videos referencin­g QAnonrelat­ed conspiracy theories.

Facebook, meanwhile, has struggled and failed to institute previous policies comprehens­ively.

In its August move, the platform aimed to limit the reach of QAnon pages and accounts, even if it couldn’t ban them. Still, the company’s own algorithm recommende­d users to groups discussing the conspiracy theory, and groups continued to grow, adding hundreds of members, a New York Times investigat­ion in September found.

Since the ban in August, QAnon groups have come up with ways to become less explicit in their references to the conspiracy theory in order to escape sanctions by the company.

“Facebook helped the QAnon community grow exponentia­lly — and refused to take appropriat­e action earlier this year, when it would have mattered,” Angelo Carusone, president of the nonprofit watchdog organizati­on Media Matters for America, said in a statement.

Carusone said the company bungled its earlier crackdown, giving the QAnon community warning with its announceme­nt and “ample time” to change group names and page descriptio­ns.

The U. S. House of Representa­tives last week approved a bipartisan resolution condemning the conspiracy theory.

Top Senate Democrats, including Mark R. Warner of Virginia, have called on President Trump to disavow the movement, to no avail. Far from it — Trump praised QAnon followers for supporting him.

“I’m pleased to see Facebook take action against this harmful and increasing­ly dangerous conspiracy theory and movement,” Warner said in a statement. “Ultimately, the real test will be whether Facebook actually takes measures to enforce these new policies — we’ve seen in a myriad of other contexts, including with respect to right- wing militias like the Boogaloos, that Facebook has repeatedly failed to consistent­ly enforce its existing policies.”

 ?? Ted S. Warren Associated Press ?? A SUPPORTER of QAnon protests coronaviru­s stay- at- home orders on May 14 in Olympia, Wash.
Ted S. Warren Associated Press A SUPPORTER of QAnon protests coronaviru­s stay- at- home orders on May 14 in Olympia, Wash.

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