The Oakland Press

Defying rules, anti-vaccine accounts thrive on social media

- By Barbara Ortutay and Amanda Seitz

With vaccinatio­n against COVID-19 in full swing, social platforms like Facebook, Instagram and Twitter say they’ve stepped up their fight against misinforma­tion that aims to undermine trust in the vaccines. But problems abound.

For years, the same platforms have allowed antivaccin­ation propaganda to flourish, making it difficult to stamp out such sentiments now. And their efforts to weed out other types of COVID-19 misinforma­tion — often with fact-checks, informatio­nal labels and other restrained measures, has been woefully slow.

Twitter, for instance, announced this month that it will remove dangerous falsehoods about vaccines, much the same way it’s done for other COVIDrelat­ed conspiracy theories and misinforma­tion. But since April 2020, it has removed a grand total of 8,400 tweets spreading COVID-related misinforma­tion — a tiny fraction of the avalanche of pandemicre­lated falsehoods tweeted out daily by popular users with millions of followers, critics say.

“While they fail to take action, lives are being lost,” said Imran Ahmed, CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a watchdog group. In December, the nonprofit found that 59 million accounts across social platforms follow peddlers of anti-vax propaganda — many of whom are immensely popular supersprea­ders of misinforma­tion.

Efforts to crack down on vaccine misinforma­tion now, though, are generating cries of censorship and prompting some posters to adopt sneaky tactics to avoid the axe.

“It’s a hard situation because we have let this go for so long,” said Jeanine Guidry, an assistant professor at Virginia Commonweal­th University who studies social media and health informatio­n. “People using social media have really been able to share what they want for nearly a decade.”

The Associated Press identified more than a dozen Facebook pages and Instagram accounts, collective­ly boasting millions of followers, that have made false claims about the COVID-19 vaccine or discourage­d people from taking it. Some of these pages have existed for years.

Of more than 15 pages identified by NewsGuard, a technology company that analyzes the credibilit­y of websites, roughly half remain active on Facebook, the AP found.

One such page, The Truth About Cancer, has more than a million Facebook followers after years of posting baseless suggestion­s that vaccines could cause autism or damage children’s brains. The page was identified in November as a “COVID-19 vaccine misinforma­tion super spreader” by NewsGuard.

Recently, the page stopped posting about vaccines and the coronaviru­s. It now directs people to sign up for its newsletter and visit its website as a way to avoid alleged “censorship.”

Facebook said it is taking “aggressive steps to fight misinforma­tion across our apps by removing millions of pieces of COVID-19 and vaccine content on Facebook and Instagram during the pandemic.”

“Research shows one of the best ways to promote vaccine acceptance is by showing people accurate, trusted informatio­n, which is why we’ve connected 2 billion people to resources from heath authoritie­s and launched a global informatio­n campaign,” the company said in a statement.

Facebook also banned ads that discourage vaccines and said it has added warning labels to more than 167 million pieces of additional COVID-19 content thanks to our network of fact-checking partners. (The Associated Press is one of Facebook’s factchecki­ng partners).

YouTube, which has generally avoided the same type scrutiny as its social media peers despite being a source of misinforma­tion, said it has removed more than 30,000 videos since October, when it started banning false claims about COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Since February 2020, it has removed over 800,000 videos related to dangerous or misleading coronaviru­s informatio­n, said YouTube spokeswoma­n Elena Hernandez.

Prior to the pandemic, however, social media platforms had done little to stamp out misinforma­tion, said Andy Pattison, manager of digital solutions for the World Health Organizati­on. In 2019, as a measles outbreak slammed the Pacific Northwest and left dozens dead in America Samoa, Pattison pleaded with big tech companies to take a closer look at tightening rules around vaccine misinforma­tion that he feared might make the outbreak worse — to no avail.

It wasn’t until COVID-19 struck with a vengeance that many of those tech companies started listening. Now he meets weekly with Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to discuss trends on their platforms and policies to consider.

“When it comes to vaccine misinforma­tion, the really frustratin­g thing is that this has been around for years,” Pattison said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A medical staff member prepares the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Tudor Ranch in Mecca, Calif.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A medical staff member prepares the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Tudor Ranch in Mecca, Calif.

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