USA TODAY International Edition

Report: Facebook overrun by COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n lies

- Brett Molina and Jessica Guynn USA TODAY

Anti- vaccine activists flooded Facebook to sow doubt about the COVID- 19 vaccines, overwhelmi­ng efforts to stop them, even as the company told the world that it was not responsibl­e for vaccine hesitancy, a new report from the Wall Street Journal has found.

Of about 150,000 users posting in Facebook Groups disabled for spreading COVID- 19 misinforma­tion, 5% produced half of the posts, and 1,400 invited half of the new members, one document unearthed by the newspaper found.

The report paints a picture of a company outfoxed by a small but wily group of anti- vaccine activists that it called “big whales.”

Facebook researcher­s in May compared the problem to QAnon and allegation­s of election fraud, “with a relatively few number of actors creating a large percentage of the content and growth.”

The other problem: These same activists were targeting comments on Facebook posts, giving the appearance that vaccine skepticism and resistance were more widespread than they were. In one random sampling, twothirds of comments were “anti- vax,” a Facebook researcher found.

In a statement to USA TODAY, Facebook spokespers­on Aaron Simpson said the documents unearthed in the report show the company’s routine process in navigating tough challenges.

“Narrowly characteri­zing leaked documents doesn’t accurately represent the problem, and it also ignores the work that’s been underway to make comments on posts about COVID- 19 and vaccines safer and more reliable,” Simpson said.

Research released this year by the Center for Countering Digital Hate and Anti- Vax Watch showed that a small number of anti- vaccine accounts were responsibl­e for falsehoods about the safety of the vaccines that reached tens of millions on Facebook, Instagram, Google’s YouTube and Twitter.

A dozen state attorneys general have called on Facebook and Twitter to take more aggressive action against conspiracy theories, hoaxes and lies that undermine public confidence in the COVID- 19 vaccines.

“This report today confirms the research of CCDH and Anti- Vax Watch, particular­ly that a small group of individual­s are responsibl­e for most of the anti- vaccine content on the platform, and demonstrat­es that Facebook officials were deliberate­ly deceptive when they claimed this wasn’t the case,” CCDH CEO Imran Ahmed said in a statement.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg reportedly faced a huge challenge in encouragin­g Facebook users to get vaccinated against COVID- 19: his own social media platform.

According to The Wall Street Journal, which cites internal documents, researcher­s at Facebook warned that comments on vaccine- related posts were filled with anti- vaccine messaging and misinforma­tion aimed at undercutti­ng efforts at pushing the vaccine.

Agencies such as UNICEF and the World Health Organizati­on expressed concerns about the flurry of anti- vaccine comments appearing on their posts encouragin­g users get vaccinated, the report said.

An internal memo showed Facebook researcher­s were worried all the negative comments could skew users’ views on whether the vaccines were safe, the Journal reported.

In March, Zuckerberg wrote a post on a campaign to help 50 million people get vaccinated as rollout started to expand in the U. S. and other parts of the world.

They included tools for when and where to get vaccinated and a COVID- 19 Informatio­n Center where users can seek more informatio­n.

“The data shows the vaccines are safe and they work,” Zuckerberg wrote. “They’re our best hope for getting past this virus and getting back to normal life.”

Friday’s Journal report is the latest in a series showing how Facebook is aware of how flaws in its platform can cause harm to users. A separate report last week detailed how company- owned app Instagram can have a negative impact on the mental health and body image of teenage girls.

In February, Facebook warned of a broad crackdown against COVID- 19 misinforma­tion, threatenin­g to remove groups or pages from the platform for repeatedly spreading false informatio­n.

In July, U. S. Sens. Amy Klobuchar, DMinn., and Ben Ray Luján, D- N. M., introduced a bill that would create an exception under Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act related to misinforma­tion spread about a public health emergency. Section 230 provides protection for social media companies against content their users post.

 ?? PROVIDED BY FACEBOOK ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg advocated for vaccinatio­n in a March post.
PROVIDED BY FACEBOOK Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg advocated for vaccinatio­n in a March post.

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