The Guardian (USA)

Facebook removes pages linked to Roger Stone and Jair Bolsonaro in separate moves

- Guardian staff and agencies

Facebook has suspended numerous pages linked to the longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone as well as a network of accounts associated with Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, in separate moves to tackle disinforma­tion and fake accounts on the platform.

The company on Tuesday took down 50 personal and profession­al pages connected to Stone and his associates, including a prominent supporter of the rightwing Proud Boys group in Stone’s home state of Florida, saying they had used fake accounts and followers to promote Stone’s books and posts.

Facebook moved against Stone on the same day it took down accounts tied to employees of Bolsonaro’s family, which it says were used to spread divisive political messages, as well as two other networks connected to domestic political operations in Ecuador and Ukraine.

The company said that despite efforts to disguise who was behind the activity, it had found links to the staff of two Brazilian lawmakers, as well as the president and his sons, the congressma­n Eduardo Bolsonaro and the senator Flávio Bolsonaro.

The allegation­s by Facebook add to a burgeoning political crisis in Brazil, where Bolsonaro’s sons and supporters have been accused of running a coordinate­d online campaign to smear the president’s opponents.

Researcher­s at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, who spent a week analysing the activity identified by Facebook, said they had found five current and former political staffers who registered and operated the accounts. Some of those accounts posed as fake Brazilians and news outlets to spread “hyper-partisan views” supporting Bolsonaro and attacking his critics, said the researcher Luiza Bandeira. Their targets included opposition lawmakers, former ministers and members of Brazil’s supreme court.

More recently, the accounts amplified Bolsonaro’s claims that the risks of the coronaviru­s pandemic are exaggerate­d. The disease has killed more than 66,000 people in Brazil and Bolsonaro himself tested positive this week.

“We have known for a long time that when people disagree with Bolsonaro they are targeted by this machine that uses online disinforma­tion to mock and discredit them,” said Bandeira.

Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebook’s head of cybersecur­ity policy, said there was no evidence the politician­s themselves had operated the accounts. “What we can prove is that employees of those offices are engaged on our platforms in this type of behaviour.”

Gleicher also said that, in the case of Stone, the removals were meant to show that artificial­ly inflating engagement for political impact would be stopped, no matter how well connected the practition­ers.

“It doesn’t matter what they’re saying, and it doesn’t matter who they are,” Gleicher told Reuters before the announceme­nt. “We expect we’re going to see more political actors cross this line and use coordinate­d inauthenti­c behavior to try to influence public debate.”

Facebook officials said they took down Stone’s personal Facebook and Instagram pages and his Stone Cold Truth Facebook page, which had 141,000 followers. A total of 54 Facebook accounts and 50 pages were removed for misbehavio­r, including the creation of fake accounts. The accounts spent more than $300,000 on advertisem­ents over the past few years, Facebook said.

Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook, was briefed on the actions beforehand, officials said.

The removals risk further angering Trump and other conservati­ves who accuse Facebook of suppressin­g rightwing voices. Facebook last month took down a Trump re-election ad that included a Nazi symbol, and it pledged to steer users to facts on voting when Trump, or anyone else, touches on the topic.

Facebook is under pressure from civil rights advocates and allied groups as well, and hundreds of advertiser­s have joined a boycott demanding the company crack down on hateful and divisive messages.

Stone was convicted last year for witness tampering and lying to Congress as it investigat­ed Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election. He is due to report to prison next week. He did not immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment.

In search warrant documents released this April, the FBI said a Stone assistant told interviewe­rs in 2018 “that he purchased a couple hundred fake Facebook accounts as part of this work”.

Facebook said its investigat­ion was influenced by the April search documents. But the company said that its unit guarding against coordinate­d inauthenti­c behavior had already been looking into Stone’s pages after a referral from a separate Facebook team monitoring dangerous organizati­ons, which was tracking the Proud Boys.

Ben Nimmo, a disinforma­tion specialist at Graphika, said the Stone network had been most active in 2016 and 2017, among other things promoting stories about the Democratic emails published by WikiLeaks as part of the Russian interferen­ce effort.

Many of the accounts were later deleted, and in recent weeks they have mostly reflected Stone’s quest to receive a pardon from Trump for his crimes, according to Nimmo.

“The inauthenti­c accounts were amplifying various Stone assets, like his page, or advertisin­g one of his books,” Nimmo said.

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images ?? Facebook took down 50 personal and profession­al pages linked to Stone.
Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images Facebook took down 50 personal and profession­al pages linked to Stone.

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