USA TODAY US Edition

Facebook: Election ads linked to Russia

Suspicious ads ran from 2015-17, were traced to ‘troll farm’

- Jessica Guynn @jguynn USA TODAY

Facebook says an internal investigat­ion has uncovered $100,000 in advertisin­g spending by hundreds of fake accounts and pages, likely operated out of Russia, which sought to sow political division during the U.S. presidenti­al election.

The giant social network says the ads that ran between June 2015 and May 2017 carried “divisive social and political messages across the ideologica­l spectrum,” touching on topics such as LGBT, race, immigratio­n and gun rights, though most of them did not directly mention the election. A small number of the ads named then-Republican nominee Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton.

The ads were traced to a Russian “troll farm,” a Facebook official said on the condition of

anonymity because he is not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

Facebook says it has shared the findings with U.S. investigat­ors.

The ads are part of a new kind of attack that Facebook calls “informatio­n operations,” a web of nefarious and insidious activities that extends far beyond “fake news.” In a white paper earlier this year, the Silicon Valley company outlined how this strategy can be used to misinform the public, including the creation of networks of fake accounts to distort public sentiment.

Facebook uncovered 470 suspicious and likely fake Facebook accounts and pages that it believes operated out of Russia. The official declined to share any of the ads, citing the company’s data privacy policy.

The accounts and the pages in question have been deleted. In hunting for other suspect ads, it turned up $50,000 spent on 2,200 ads it says could have been politicall­y related. The internal investigat­ion into politicall­y motivated ads began this spring after discussion­s with U.S. officials, the Facebook official said.

Special counsel Robert Mueller and congressio­nal committees are investigat­ing whether the Kremlin meddled in the election and if that meddling had any connection to Trump’s campaign.

Mueller was named to the post after Trump fired former FBI director James Comey, who had been leading the investigat­ion. President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials have denied involvemen­t in the U.S. election.

The U.S. intelligen­ce community concluded in January that Russia had interfered in the U.S. election to help elect Trump by spreading fake news and misinforma­tion to sway public opinion.

Widely criticized for helping spread bogus news during the election, Facebook has since conceded its network was exploited by government­s and other interests intent on manipulati­ng public opinion, including during the presidenti­al elections in the U.S. and France.

Some 170 million people in North America use Facebook every day. Nearly half of all adults in the U.S. say they get their news from Facebook.

Facebook found 470 suspicious and likely fake Facebook accounts and pages that it believes operated out of Russia.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO, AP ??
JOHN MINCHILLO, AP

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