Dayton Daily News

Twitter finds more accounts with links to Russian agency

Company says it has suspended nearly 4,000 accounts.

- By Selina Wang

SAN FRANCISCO — Twitter Inc. said it found another 1,062 accounts linked to the Russian government-backed Internet Research Agency accused of trying to influence the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

The social media company said it is emailing notificati­ons to 677,775 people in the U.S. who followed one of these accounts or retweeted or liked a tweet from these accounts during the election period, according to a blog post Friday. The new IRA accounts are in addition to 2,752 accounts Twitter found and disclosed last year.

All the IRA-related accounts have been suspended and the company is sharing informatio­n about them with congressio­nal investigat­ors who are reviewing potential manipulati­on in the 2016 election. During the time period Twitter investigat­ed, the 3,814 identified IRA-linked accounts posted 175,993 tweets, about 8.4 percent of which were election-related.

“After the 2016 election, we launched our Informatio­n Quality initiative to further develop strategies to detect and prevent bad actors from abusing our platform,” the company said in the post. “We have since made significan­t improvemen­ts, while recognizin­g that we have more to do as these patterns of activity develop and shift over time.”

Lawmakers have sharply criticized the social media companies for taking too long to recognize the seriousnes­s of the Russian attempts to sow discord among U.S. voters. Twitter said that in preparatio­n for the 2018 midterm elections it would verify major party candidates for all statewide and federal offices, with open “lines of communicat­ion” to federal and state officials. The company has also banned Russian state media accounts from buying ads and is creating a “transparen­cy center” to show how much political campaigns spend on advertisin­g, the identity of the organizati­on funding the campaign, and what demographi­cs the ads targeted.

Twitter’s announceme­nt Friday comes after Facebook Inc. said it would show people which Russian propaganda pages or accounts they had followed and liked on the social network. Last year, when Twitter first disclosed the IRA-related accounts, it also revealed that more than 36,000 Russian-linked accounts generated about 1.4 million automated, election-related tweets.

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