On Tuesday, the numbers of accounts removed for "coordinated inauthentic behavior" was raised to 36 at Facebook and 99 at the social network's Instagram service.
Facebook
on Tuesday said it shut down more accounts aimed at influencing the
US
midterm election and that it is exploring a possible link to
Russia."As we've continued to investigate, we detected and
removed some additional Facebook and Instagram accounts," head
of cybersecurity policy Nathaniel Gleicher said in an update posted
at the social network.While stressing the challenge of identifying
the culprits, he noted that a website claiming to be associated with
the Internet Research Agency (IRA), a Russia-based
troll farm, published a list of Instagram accounts they said that
they had created.
Facebook
had already shut down most of those accounts, and blocked the rest
after an internal investigation, according to Gleicher. (Business
Standard )
"Ultimately,
this effort may have been connected to the IRA, but we aren't best
placed to say definitively whether that is the case," Gleicher
said.
"Trolls
have an incentive to claim that their activities are more widespread
and influential than may be the case." On the eve of the midterm
election, Facebook announced it blocked some 30 accounts on its
platform and 85 more on Instagram after police warned they may be
linked to "foreign entities" trying to interfere.
On
Tuesday, the numbers of accounts removed for "coordinated
inauthentic behavior" was raised to 36 at Facebook
and 99 at the social network's Instagram service.
Most
of the accounts were created after the middle of last year. Overall,
the Instagram accounts had amassed about 1.25 million followers, with
600,000 of those people located in the United States, according to
Facebook.
Meanwhile,
the Facebook pages had attracted a total of approximately 65,000
followers in total, with posts mainly in French.
Most
of the Instagram accounts were said to be in English.
Facebook
shared examples of content being shared, saying there were many posts
about celebrities as well as social issues such as women's rights and
gay pride.
Facebook
blocked the initial accounts a day after being contact by US law
enforcement officials about online activity they believe may be
linked to foreign entities.
A
study published in late October found that misinformation on social
media was spreading at a greater rate than during the run-up to the
2016 presidential vote, which Russia is accused of manipulating
through a vast propaganda campaign in favor of Donald Trump, the
eventual winner.
Major
online social platforms have been under intense pressure to avoid
being used by "bad actors" out to sway outcomes by
publishing misinformation and enraging voters.
Facebook
weeks ago opened a "war room" at its Menlo Park
headquarters in California to be a nerve center for the fight against
misinformation and manipulation of the largest social network by
foreign actors trying to influence elections in the United States and
elsewhere.
The
war room is part of stepped up security announced by Facebook, which
will be adding some 20,000 employees.
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