Daily Nation Newspaper

Facebook bans "inauthenti­c" accounts targeting Africa

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LONDON - Facebook has removed hundreds of social media accounts and banned an Israeli firm due to "co-ordinated inauthenti­c behaviour" mainly targeting Africa.

The fake accounts often posted on political news, including on elections in various countries, the firm said.

Facebook has faced rising criticism for failing to stamp out misinforma­tion on its platform.

It launched a fact-checking programme in 2016 shortly after Donald Trump became US president.

In a blog post, Facebook said it had removed 265 social media accounts that originated in Israel and focused on Nigeria, Senegal, Togo, Angola, Niger and Tunisia, along with "some activity" in Latin America and South East Asia.

"The people behind this network used fake accounts to run pages, disseminat­e their content and artificial­ly increase engagement.

"They also represente­d themselves as locals, including local news organisati­ons, and published allegedly leaked informatio­n about politician­s," Nathaniel Gleicher, head of cybersecur­ity policy at Facebook, wrote in the post.

An investigat­ion found that some of the activity was linked to Israeli company Archimedes Group, Gleicher said.

"This organisati­on and all its subsidiari­es are now banned from Facebook, and it has been issued a cease and desist letter," he said.

The people behind the phantom accounts spent around $812, 000 for ads between December 2012 and April 2019, Facebook said, and these were paid for in Brazilian reais, Israeli shekel and US dollars.

Five of the six African countries targeted have had elections since 2016, and Tunisia will hold national polls later this year.

Facebook has faced increasing criticism for failing to eradicate misinforma­tion that could affect the way people vote in elections. – BBC.

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