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Google Removes Accounts Tied To Iran-Led Misinformation Campaign (engadget.com) 87

In a blog post, Google shared an update regarding its efforts to combat state-sponsored phishing attacks and to remove accounts associated with an influence operation linked to Iran. Engadget reports: The company said that in recent months, it has detected and blocked state-sponsored groups from targeting political campaigns, journalists, activists and academics with phishing attempts. Google has also been working with the cybersecurity group FireEye, which has been providing Google with information on an Iran-based misinformation operation. FireEye identified three email accounts, three YouTube channels and three Google+ accounts linked to that operation, which Google subsequently took down.

In conjunction to the intelligence provided by FireEye, Google also investigated other suspicious groups linked to Iran. The company identified and removed 39 YouTube channels, six Blogger blogs and 13 Google+ accounts it believed to be connected to the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting. Relevant videos on the now-terminated YouTube channels had garnered 13,466 views in the U.S.
Facebook and Twitter were also made aware of the Iranian operation. Twitter announced that it suspended 284 accounts believed to have originated from Iran for "engaging in coordinated manipulation." Meanwhile, Facebook said it removed "652 pages that it says were linked to a campaign originating in Iran, as well as an unspecified number of accounts liked to Russian military intelligence services," reports Engadget.
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Google Removes Accounts Tied To Iran-Led Misinformation Campaign

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  • by manu0601 ( 2221348 ) on Thursday August 23, 2018 @08:03PM (#57183620)
    We are told fake news were removed, but we have no sample of the suppressed speech so that we can make up our own mind about it. It looks a lot like censorship.
    • It is, at least if what Google censored is similar to what Facebook censored [fb.com], which has more integrity than a lot of legitimate US media.
    • Why, Google will judge for us, of course. They have all the smart people working for them. We can trust them. And as for censorship? Google just had thousands of employees revolt over complying with China's censorship. Surely they would never agree to what the Western ruling class wants censored. It's not like they're a part of it. They are rebels, loners, fighting the good fight against...the Islamic Republic of Iran? Hmm I thought Islamophobia was a big no-no? Anyway the point is to trust Google and not q
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      none of all misinformation campaigns coming out from USA are supressed, that should give you a big tip

    • We're not smart enough to make up our own minds.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    https://www.fireeye.com/content/dam/fireeye-www/blog/pdfs/rpt-FireEye-Iranian-IO.pdf

    Seems like the main crime they committed was supporting Palestine, and opposing human rights violations in Saudi Arabia.

    "Multiple regionally focused Liberty Front Press Twitter accounts
    have retweeted content from the original affiliated Twitter
    accounts (@libertyfrontpr and @libertyfrontp) that contained,
    for example, anti-Saudi, anti-Israel, pro-Palestine, and antiTrump
    sentiments."

    Oh no, how ever shall our democracy survive a

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "Broadly speaking, the intent behind this activity appears to
      be to promote Iranian political interests, including anti-Saudi,
      anti-Israeli, and pro-Palestinian themes, as well as to promote
      support for specific U.S. policies favorable to Iran, such as the
      U.S.-Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA). In the context of the U.S.-focused
      activity, this also includes significant anti-Trump messaging
      and the alignment of social media personas with an American
      liberal identity. However, it is important to note that the activity
      does

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • How sad to see slashdot reduced to spouting neocon cyber-büll-shít :[
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 23, 2018 @10:26PM (#57184068)

      Washington loves the two most depraved states on the Earth equally, Isr-el and Saudi Arabia. And the z-onists and wahhabis are blood brothers. Slashdot is just another media mouthpiece for the one, and thus the other. Every day Slashdot tries to demonise Iran.

      The excuse given by the z-onist owners of Facebook for banning the 'Iran' accounts was that they dared to support the Iran nuclear treaty.

      I'm reminded of when Tony Blair blew up the Serbia equivalent of the BBC HQ (civilian TV centre) because the station dared to run programs criticising Tony Blair's Kosovo War, and dared to show images of the thousands of civilians Blair murdered in Serbia. The actual BBC stated the bombing was justified (many many civilian workers were slaughtered) because the Serbs had no right to tell the truth when it ran against 'british' propaganda interests. Indeed it was a BBC foreign correspondent who phoned back to confirm all the foreign journalists had left the target building for the night, so the RAF could then murder ever civilian Serb who remained in the HQ. Jill Dando- a BBC journalist who fronted the anti-serb war propaganda- was murdered at her home in revenge shortly afetrwards.

      Or perhaps you prefer the example of Loony Tunes cartoons that used nazi-style racist imagery to demonise the people of Japan during WW2.

      In a time of WAR, the 'enemy' is to be denied a voice regardless of truth. The tech giants know the war on Iran has actually begun, and are acting accordingly.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      I hardly see it as convincing anyone and all it does is put forward the question, are the corporate douche bags censoring US government propaganda in other countries to protect those countries citizens from the mountains of bullshit coming out of the US. Are the winning the censor law, nope, they are just crippling their businesses. They are simply pushing the censorship button as hard as they can until the public react.

      Of course the typical complain but the mug punters will be mislead. Reality is, mug pun

  • by Harvey Manfrenjenson ( 1610637 ) on Thursday August 23, 2018 @09:47PM (#57183978)

    Instead of sending all these Facebook/Twitter postings down the memory hole, they should just flag them: "These are posts which we have reason to believe originated with Iranian operatives" (or Russian military, or whatever they think it is). Give people the option to hide these posts, or to browse them, or whatever they want to do. Personally, I'd be curious to look at them, at least briefly. It could perhaps lead me to be better informed about what the various state actors are up to on social media. It would certainly do a lot to raise public awareness of that problem.

    The current solution sucks, since it does nothing to raise awareness of the problem, and raises the possibility that Facebook is engaging in censorship for their own reasons. As others have observed on this thread: it smells a little gamey when Facebook says "We're going to delete all these posts because we think they originated with [x]. No, we're not going to tell you why we think that".

    The solution to speech you don't like is to add more speech of your own. The solution is never to suppress the speech you don't like.

  • by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Thursday August 23, 2018 @10:22PM (#57184066)

    at least one US-lead disinformation campaign, this is censorship on behalf of the US government, and nothing else.

    Remember Iraq having nukular weapons, ready to strike in under 4 hours? Remember "Alkaida operating out of Baghdad"? Remember "Syria chemical weapons facilities bombed", when the said facilities were inspected by OPCW months early and declared clean? Remember Hans Blix?

    All these lies were used as excuses for massive wars, which brought an enormous amount of suffering. In combination, the propaganda and the wars are a crime against humanity.

    But where's the outrage?

    • Remember Iraq having nukular weapons, ready to strike in under 4 hours? Remember "Alkaida operating out of Baghdad"?

      Nope, because Bush wasn't crazy enough to use lies that obviously silly (plus there's no way America would've been willing to go to war with a country that could inflict serious damage back). WMDs was the chant, because they thought Iraq might still have the chemical weapons the USA sold them.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    sure..while US based WMD information is endorsed and further propagated

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  • Poor Iranfowars! Always getting beat up.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    The key points here are 1. differentiating information campaigns and misinformation campaigns and 2. what to do about them.

    Information campaigns should not be stopped, even if they are done on behalf of a government or by government agencies.
    Misinformation campaigns should be labeled so and links to definite proof of why said information is untruthful should be attached.

    Anyone censoring others and claiming it was because it was misinformation is doing exactly what the Chinese government does.

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