The Oakland Press

Facebook: Fake pages from China tried to disrupt U.S. politics

- By Barbara Ortutay and Eric Tucker

Facebook says it has removed a small network of fake accounts and pages that originated in China and focused on disrupting political activity in the U.S. and several other countries.

The U.S.-focused activity was just a “sliver” of the accounts’ overall activity and gained almost no following, Facebook said. Their primary focus was Southeast Asia, including the Philippine­s.

In the U.S, the accounts posted material both in support of and against presidenti­al candidates Pete Buttigieg, Joe Biden and President Donald Trump.

Facebook did not link the network directly to the Chinese government. It said the people behind the network tried to conceal their identity and location via virtual private networks and other methods.

Concerns about foreign efforts to interfere in the election were underscore­d by a warning Tuesday from the FBI and Department of Homeland Security that foreign actors and cybercrimi­nals were likely to spread disinforma­tion regarding the results of the election, including by creating fake websites or social media content to discredit the process.

U.S. intelligen­ce officials warned last month about ongoing or potential efforts by China, Russia and Iran to interfere in the 2020 election. In an August public assessment, the country’s chief counterint­elligence official, William Evanina, said officials had determined that Beijing regards Trump as unpredicta­ble and wants to see him lose to Biden.

The statement said that China had been expanding its influence operations ahead of the 2020 election to “shape the policy environmen­t in the

United States” and had been weighing the pros and cons of taking more aggressive action.

Notably, though, the intelligen­ce assessment was more specific in its characteri­zations of Russian interferen­ce, saying that Moscow was using a range of measures to denigrate Biden and that Kremlin-linked actors were propping up Trump’s candidacy on social media and Russian interferen­ce.

The question of which country poses the biggest threat to election security has emerged as a politicall­y fraught issue.

Trump and several senior administra­tion officials have repeatedly insisted that China is more aggressive, even though that characteri­zation is not in line with the August intelligen­ce assessment. After FBI Director Chris Wray outlined the threat of Russian interferen­ce at a congressio­nal hearing last week and warned of its ongoing danger, Trump harangued him on Twitter by calling China a “FAR greater threat than Russia, Russia, Russia.”

Facebook said the network focused mainly on Southeast Asia, where it posted in Chinese, Filipino and English about global news and current events.

These included Beijing’s interests in the South China Sea, Hong Kong, support for Philippine­s President Rodrigo Duterte and his daughter’s potential run in that nation’s 2022 presidenti­al election, and criticism of Rappler, an independen­t news organizati­on in the Philippine­s.

Facebook also removed a second network originatin­g in the Philippine­s. These accounts posted in Filipino and English about local news and events including domestic politics, military activities against terrorism, a pending anti-terrorism bill, criticism of communism, youth activists and opposition, the company said.

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