The Day

Twitter, Facebook suspend fake accounts to punish China

- By MARIE C. BACA and TONY ROMM

Twitter and Facebook said Monday that they had taken action against China for using hundreds of fake accounts to sow political discord during the Hong Kong protests, marking the first time the social media giants had identified Beijing directly for spearheadi­ng such an operation.

Twitter said it was suspending nearly a thousand Chinese accounts and banning advertisin­g from state-owned media companies, citing a “significan­t state-backed informatio­n operation” related to protests in Hong Kong. Meanwhile, Facebook said it was removing five Facebook accounts, seven pages and three groups after being tipped off to the use of “a number of deceptive tactics, including the use of fake accounts.”

The new takedowns by Facebook and Twitter reflect the extent to which disinforma­tion has become a global scourge, far surpassing the once-secret efforts of Russian agents to stoke social unrest in the United States during the 2016 presidenti­al election. Researcher­s recently have pointed to similar campaigns linked to Saudi Arabia, Israel, China, the United Arab Emirates and Venezuela, efforts aimed at shaping discussion­s on social media beyond their borders.

“It’s almost like wherever you look, you’re finding this stuff,” said Ben Nimmo, chief of investigat­ions for Graphika, a network analysis firm based in New York that studies online disinforma­tion.

Some of this activity has come under the auspices of state-controlled media. In August, for example, Facebook, Google and Twitter each identified a sprawling disinforma­tion campaign originatin­g out of Iran that posted content — and in some cases, purchased ads — in a bid to amplify accounts with ties to state news organizati­ons.

Google did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Hundreds of thousands of protesters have been demonstrat­ing for an autonomous Hong Kong over the past two months, including a peaceful march Sunday. Hong Kong police have deployed force, including in residentia­l neighborho­ods, and made more than 700 arrests to discourage further unrest. Protesters and pro-establishm­ent groups have clashed violently. And Beijing has ramped up pressure.

Facebook said that the pages it removed had about 15,500 accounts following one or more, while 2,200 accounts joined at least one of the groups. The company said its investigat­ion had found “links to individual­s associated with the Chinese government.” Though Facebook is not considerin­g a ban on advertisin­g from state-sponsored media, the company said it is working on additional transparen­cy measures.

Twitter said the new advertisin­g policy released Monday was something that had been previously discussed internally. The company said in its blog post that state-backed news media accounts “will be free to continue to use Twitter to engage in public conversati­on,” just not its advertisin­g products.

Twitter confronted a similar issue in 2016 after discoverin­g that Russia Today, or RT, which the U.S. government has labeled a propaganda arm of the Kremlin, had purchased roughly $1.9 million in ads over an eight-year period. In late 2017, Twitter said it decided to cut advertisin­g from all those accounts.

The accounts were part of a larger network of roughly 200,000 accounts that were proactivel­y deleted before they were substantia­lly active, Twitter said in a blog post. That’s despite Twitter being blocked in China, the company added. Twitter said that the accounts it suspended were accessed from virtual private networks, or VPNs, or unblocked Internet protocol addresses originatin­g from China.

“Overall, these accounts were deliberate­ly and specifical­ly attempting to sow political discord in Hong Kong, including underminin­g the legitimacy and political positions of the protest movement on the ground,” Twitter said in the blog post. “Based on our intensive investigat­ions, we have reliable evidence to support that this is a coordinate­d state-backed operation.”

About 448,000 people in Hong Kong use Twitter, according to the market research firm eMarketer. About 4.7 million people there log in to Facebook at least once a month.

Graham Brookie, director of the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, said he sees the Twitter and Facebook campaigns as “a test case” for China as they prepare for major events over the next year — such as the elections in Taiwan — for which informatio­n operations will be key.

Data released by Twitter on the deleted accounts revealed a number of users with large follower counts and a sometime-tenuous grasp of American culture and the English language. The fake accounts showed supposed locations in Las Vegas, Houston and Moscow.

One account with more than 181,000 followers, LibertyLio­nNews, advertised itself as: “Conservati­ve News from the USA and Abroad. #Catholic Defender of the Constituti­on of the United States. #Qanon #MAGA #BUILDTHEWA­LL #TRUMP #2A #1A.” Another account said it was a Columbus, Ohio-based “coupon clipping, money saving, low key hustling super mom” who lives “in the suburbs” but is “from the hood.” Others were more abstract: “I want a satrawberr­ie!” the account ReStrawber­ries exclaimed.

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