The Day

Facebook: Russia, Iran used site to mislead users globally

- By CRAIG TIMBERG, ELIZABETH DWOSKIN and TONY ROMM

Iran was behind a sprawling disinforma­tion operation on Facebook that targeted hundreds of thousands of people around the world, the social media company said Tuesday night, underscori­ng Silicon Valley’s increasing­ly global war on disinforma­tion.

The Iranian effort dated to 2011 and had ties to state media operations in that country, Facebook said, involving hundreds of accounts on both Facebook and its sister site, Instagram. The fake Iranian accounts also bought ads on the social media platform and used it to organize events.

Facebook also deleted some unrelated fake accounts originatin­g in Russia, which has been the main focus of reporting on disinforma­tion operations targeting the United States. Tuesday night’s revelation­s were unusual because the disinforma­tion targeted people in many countries — the Middle East, Latin America, the U.K. and the U.S., Facebook said — and involved a nation-state actor other than Russia.

Facebook officials said their actions showed that they are moving more aggressive­ly than in 2016, when the company was widely criticized for not more effectivel­y detecting and combating disinforma­tion on its service.

“As I’ve said before, security is not something that you ever fully solve,” Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said on a call with reporters. “Our adversarie­s are sophistica­ted and well-funded but the shift we have made from reactive to proactive detection is a big change and is going to make Facebook safer over time.”

On the heels of Facebook’s revelation­s Tuesday evening, Twitter also said that the company had removed 284 accounts for engaging in “coordinate­d manipulati­on.” Twitter said the accounts also appeared to originate from Iran.

The revelation­s demonstrat­ed how the production of disinforma­tion has become a global endeavor that involves multiple government­s and shadowy actors who use sophistica­ted methods to mask their identities and locations. A recent report from the Oxford Internet Institute, a research lab associated with Oxford University, found active organized disinforma­tion campaigns taking place on social media in 48 countries, up from 28 in 2017.

“I’ve been saying for months that there’s no way the problem of social media manipulati­on is limited to a single troll farm in St. Petersburg, and that fact is now beyond a doubt,” said Sen. Mark Warner, Va., the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee.

Facebook said the revelation­s emerged from a tip received in July from cybersecur­ity firm FireEye, and from internal investigat­ions.

The company said it had worked closely with law enforcemen­t in both the U.S. in the U.K. on the investigat­ion, and had briefed the Treasury Department and the State Department, because the U.S. has sanctions on Iran.

Facebook officials described a multi-part investigat­ion, starting with FireEye’s tip in July that an entity called the “Liberty Front Press” led to connection­s with Iranian state media dating back as long as seven years ago. Overall this group had 147 pages, accounts and groups on Facebook and 76 on Instagram, reaching more than 200,000 followers while buying more than $6,000 of ads and organizing three events.

A different set of accounts, which was unrelated to the Iranian accounts, were tied to Russian military intelligen­ce, the company said. A third group, which Facebook didn’t identify, was sharing informatio­n about Middle East politics in Arabic and Farsi.

The narratives these groups promoted included anti-Saudi, anti-Israeli, and pro-Palestinia­n themes, as well as support for specific U.S. policies favorable to Iran, such as the U.S.Iran nuclear deal, according to a blog post by FireEye.

“These were distinct campaigns and we have not identified any link or coordinati­on between them,” Facebook said in a blog post. “However, they used similar tactics by creating networks of accounts to mislead others about who they were and what they were doing.”

Facebook traced the groups using a variety of forensic methods, including searching publicly available website registrati­on informatio­n, and tracking IP addresses and Facebook pages sharing the same administra­tors.

The new revelation­s frustrated some members of Congress, who have been urging both the Trump administra­tion and the tech industry to take more decisive and swift steps to thwart Russia and others from spreading disinforma­tion online. Facebook, Twitter and Google are expected to testify at a Sept. 5 hearing in the Senate focused on foreign interferen­ce in U.S. politics and social media.

Earlier Tuesday, lawmakers heard from members of the intelligen­ce community who warned that not only Russia but other countries, like Iran and North Korea, remain cybersecur­ity threats.

“Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea will pose the greatest cyber threats to the U.S. during the next year,” said Michael Moss, the deputy director of the Cyber Threat Intelligen­ce Integratio­n Center, an entity within the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce. His comments came in prepared remarks submitted to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Moss also told lawmakers that “Tehran probably views cyberattac­ks as a versatile tool to respond to perceived provocatio­ns, despite Iran’s recent restraint from conducting cyber attacks against the U.S. or Western allies.”

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