CBC Edition

Too young to tweet? Twitter shut down CRA's account over its 'birth date,' records show

- Zach Dubinsky

Misery might love com‐ pany, but bureaucrac­y doesn't seem to relish bu‐ reaucracy.

The social media team at the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) - the second-biggest government agency or de‐ partment in the country after the military - found out first‐ hand what it can be like to jump through red tape when its Twitter and Facebook ac‐ counts were temporaril­y blocked several times in re‐ cent years for various rea‐ sons, including a decision by Twitter that the CRA was un‐ derage.

Civil servants had to navi‐ gate the social media jugger‐ nauts' client-service maze, which included requests for copies of personal ID or phone bills, in order to restore account access.

The CRA's English-lan‐ guage account on Twitter (now formally called X) has 260,000 followers and tweets on average eight to nine times a day; on Facebook, the agency has 136,000 fol‐ lowers for its English-lan‐ guage page. CRA uses both accounts to send out such in‐ formation as tax deadlines, instructio­ns on how to claim credits and warnings about the latest scams.

The suspension­s of those accounts are captured in email exchanges from March 2018 to July 2022, made pub‐ lic through a request under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

"Urgent: CRA account gone!" reads the subject line of a July 4, 2022, email from CRA social media manager Crystallin­a Chiu to someone at Twitter, whose name is blanked out in the records re‐ leased by the agency.

The email said that CRA staff couldn't read some tweets directed at the agency in recent days because Twit‐ ter's algorithms determined the user on their account "wasn't old enough."

"So, we changed our date of birth to November 1st, 1999, and now our account has been deleted?" Chiu wrote.

Twitter wanted CRA's proof of age

A number of emails went back and forth about prob‐ lems filing a help ticket, be‐ fore Twitter asked the CRA's social media team to have someone submit proof of age in the form of their gov‐ ernment ID or health card.

"I'm not super comfort‐ able with sharing my/my team members' IDs for a work-related account," Chiu wrote back, about 2.5 hours after the CRA lodged its "ur‐ gent" help request.

In a subsequent email, Chiu asked if the date of birth could be removed. "We were trying to be cheeky and give our date of birth as the Cana‐ da Revenue's anniversar­y date." (The Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, later renamed the Canada Revenue Agency, was created on Nov. 1, 1999).

The Twitter staffer who replied said they had "no idea."

Eventually, Chiu agreed to submit a copy of a driver's li‐ cence to restore access.

The next morning, the CRA regained access to its Twitter account. But its social media team quickly noticed a new problem: Because the newly approved "birth" date on the account was in No‐ vember 1999, almost all of the hundreds of tweets from 2010, 2011 and early 2012 were missing because of Twitter's age requiremen­t that all users be at least 13 years old.

Chiu once again emailed Twitter: "We're not ACTUALLY only 22. We're a government organizati­on. Are we able to reinstate that first year's tweets from 2010-2012 until Twitter thinks we turned 13? Is there a way to mark this as an organizati­on account rather than a person?"

Someone from the social media company replied, "Just give it 48 hours for the ac‐ count to settle down before looking for those older tweets."

The tweets never did reappear.

'Every social media strategist's nightmare'

The email exchanges be‐ tween the CRA and Twitter were initially obtained in No‐ vember by an unknown re‐ quester under the federal Ac‐ cess to Informatio­n Act.

The emails are included in a new database of tens of thousands of previously re‐ leased federal government documents made public on Tuesday by the Investigat­ive Journalism Foundation, a Canadian non-profit news‐ room that has published a series of databases of publicinte­rest records since it launched last year. The IJF

gave CBC News early access to its latest effort.

In an emailed response to questions on Monday evening, the CRA acknowl‐ edged the Twitter incident, the arbitrary decision to choose a birth date in 1999 and the deletion of its posts that ensued.

"The CRA has not at‐ tempted to adjust the date of birth" once again, the state‐ ment said. "Given the fact that tax informatio­n changes regularly, there is limited business value in reinstatin­g social media content from 2012. As such the CRA did not attempt to do so."

Messages to Twitter's press email address seeking comment received the com‐ pany's automatic reply, "Busy now, please check back later."

Katrina German, a tech‐ nology expert at Ethical Digi‐ tal, a Saskatoon-based digital marketing agency, said sus‐ pension of the CRA's Twitter account "is every social media strategist's night‐ mare," but ultimately the agency got lucky because someone at Twitter realized they were dealing with a big organizati­on that needed im‐ mediate help.

"Small businesses can have one heck of a time con‐ necting with anybody real at Facebook or Twitter," she said in an interview. "Some‐ times their accounts are just removed. I've had a lot of cases with clients where it's crickets - we get no response in return."

Facebook issues

The emails in the IJF's data‐ base show it wasn't just Twit‐ ter: The CRA was locked out of its Facebook pages several times, too. The first time was in March 2018, when the agency's social media team was "urgently trying to gather some stats for a media prod‐ uct that came out slamming our FB posts."

After a few Facebook em‐ ployees bounced the request for help to other colleagues, it emerged that the CRA lost the ability to post on its own page because its staff had created a fake, nameless pro‐ file to manage the page, which goes against Face‐ book's policies.

The CRA regained access, but the same problem popped up again in late 2021, when the agency wan‐ ted to post some job ads. Af‐ ter a procession of emails with Facebook's help team and some failed attempts at two-factor authentica­tion via a phone call, Facebook's al‐ gorithm automatica­lly block‐ ed the CRA's ability to publish and manage ads.

"It is actually against our policy to use fake/inauthenti­c profiles on our platform and/or to manage pages with them," someone at Facebook wrote to a CRA senior mar‐ keting adviser, warning that the same snafu could happen again because "we are cracking down on the cre‐ ation and use of inauthenti­c profiles."

It took a week for the CRA to regain the ability to pub‐ lish ads. Its job-recruiting posts were delayed as a re‐ sult.

The CRA, in its statement on Monday, acknowledg­ed it had created what it called a "content management ac‐ count" using a generic CRA email to initially set up its Facebook pages, but it de‐ nied ever using "an account with a fake name" to then manage those pages.

Luc Lefebvre, an IT secu‐ rity specialist and co-founder of the informatio­n security and privacy non-profit Cryp‐ to.Québec, said Facebook unlike Twitter - doesn't gen‐ erally allow a company to have a single login to admin‐ ister its business's page, and it's a problem.

"Employees shouldn't have to log in personally to manage these pages them‐ selves," he said in an inter‐ view in French. Lefebvre said every time a worker with ac‐ cess to the company Face‐ book page quits, for exam‐ ple, the company has to quickly rejig the permission­s so that the ex-employee doesn't deface the page.

"It's not the CRA's fault. They just want to use social media," he said.

WATCH | Meta moves to block news on Facebook and Instagram in Canada:

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada