Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Facebook Communications Network Networking Social Networks The Internet United Kingdom

Facebook Takes Down Fake Account Network Used To Spread Hate In UK (theguardian.com) 198

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Facebook has removed a network of more than 100 accounts and pages for "coordinated inauthentic behavior" on its social networks -- the first time it has done so for UK-based operations seeking to influence British citizens. The operation was spread over Facebook and Instagram and used a network of fake accounts to pose as both far-right activists and their opponents. It ran pages and groups whose names frequently changed in order to drum up more followers and operated fake accounts to engage in hate speech and spread divisive comments on both sides of UK political debate, Facebook says.

The pages, with names like "Anti Far Right Extremists", "Atheists Research Centre", and "Politicalized", attracted about 175,000 followers on Facebook, and a further 4,500 on Instagram, according to the company's head of cybersecurity policy, Nathaniel Gleicher. The pages shared content from mainstream news sources, such as the BBC and the New York Times, but also shared original content, even including administrators actively engaging in debate with users. "We are constantly working to detect and stop this type of activity because we don't want our services to be used to manipulate people," Gleicher said. "We're taking down these pages and accounts based on their behavior, not the content they posted. In each of these cases, the people behind this activity coordinated with one another and used fake accounts to misrepresent themselves, and that was the basis for our action.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Facebook Takes Down Fake Account Network Used To Spread Hate In UK

Comments Filter:
  • Key wording (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    "we don't want our services to be used to manipulate people"

    Facebook prefers to keep that power to themselves.

    "We're taking down these pages and accounts based on their behavior, not the content they posted."

    90% of the article is focused on the message of 'spreading hate', even though Facebook apparently doesn't care about the content they posted. This still doesn't explain the countless other political voices that DO get blocked and censored despite not breaking any technical rules.

    PS: Yes, Liberal

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The article actually says that the fake accounts were promoting both pro-hate and anti-hate views, so I'm not sure where the diatribe against liberals comes from.

      But yeah, the right wing does seem to host a small but unfortunately disproportionately disruptive toxic element at the moment, which most organizations want nothing to do with. Oh and being conservative (or liberal) is not a protected class, while most people outside of a small band of religious nuts would agree that sexual orientation is not a

      • Actually in California, where Faceboot is headquartered, people with political opinions _are_ a protected class. It is illegal to discriminate against a person for employment or use of public facilities, on the basis of their political views

      • Re:Key wording (Score:4, Insightful)

        by mapkinase ( 958129 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @05:13AM (#58236208) Homepage Journal

        It's not about fake accounts. It''s about accounts of certain political persuasion. There are plenty pro-violence antifa accounts that nobody touches, from organizations like BLM.

        Look at the video of MAGA children from province visiting Washington. In the beginning you see the black activists openly declaring their racist views for years in the vicinity of the white house.

        Nothing happens to the account of these.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        You are not talking about liberals, you are talking about leftists. Liberals believe in free speech. They might disagree with what you say but will defend to the death your right to say it. Leftists, on the other hand, will happily censor and we see this every day on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, etc.

        Quick question, how many offices, government and corporate, are held by these toxic rightists? How many people do they censor every day? Now compare this to the toxic left, which has real power. One need only lo

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Quick question, how many offices, government and corporate, are held by these toxic rightists?

          POTUS, at least 1 SCOTUS seat, several Congressional seats, numerous positions in the White House Executive staff, several Secretary positions, multiple state Governors, too many state Reps/Senators to count, etc.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        while most people outside of a small band of religious nuts would agree that sexual orientation is not a reasonable reason to discriminate

        Can Muslims be categorised as a "small band"?

      • Re:Key wording (Score:4, Informative)

        by mjwx ( 966435 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @09:16AM (#58236992)

        Regardless, this is about fake accounts. Nothing wrong with banning fake accounts.

        Its worse than that. The banned accounts weren't simply spewing hate, after all being a hateful little twat is FREEZE PEACH.

        Their big problem is that they created tamer pages to begin with then when they'd reached enough users they changed the name and ramped up the hateful content. Ultimately that was the reason they were banned.

        I.E. If you created a page called "British Military Humour" (despite never having even been within 5 miles of a British military installation, making you what we call a "Walt") and started off with a few risky but relatively harmless memes... When you've got enough followers you change it to "British people for the death of all Arabs and Jews" and started flooding it with InfoWars-esque conspiracy theories, then you cross the line and get your account deleted. That is pretty much what happened here.

        I do not mean to imply, good sir, that you are a bigot or a Walt. It's just an example.

        Hate groups in the UK use this kind of bait and switch because we're generally not bigots. So hate groups find it hard to recruit and need to try to lure people in by pretending they aren't hate groups, then closing the trap when it's too late.

      • by gotan ( 60103 )

        So they classify/rate political views/standpoints on a "pro-hate" "anti-hate" scale?

        And who decides how to define "hate", and decides what falls into which category?

        "Hate speech" is just a label, depending on who uses it it means different things and is applied with different intentions. There are laws defining what speech should be restricted, and often it's a difficult task for legal experts to determine how they apply to a specific case. Also this legislation was crafted very carefully to restrict free s

  • How Many More to Go (Score:4, Interesting)

    by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @11:00PM (#58235416) Homepage

    Facebook deletes 100 accounts, only 999,999,900 to go or thereabouts. I'll bet there is an internal rating system for this, approved fake accounts and unapproved fake accounts, you pay, you can have all the fake accounts you want, you don't pay and they might eventually kick you off.

    • by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @11:19PM (#58235464)

      What is a "fake" accunt anyway? At least in the EU, Facebook has got no formal right to ask you, citizen, for your papers when you create an account, which makes pretty much all their accounts from EU "fake".

      There are no transparent, open and reasonable criteria from Facebook on what various transgressions constitute "policy violation", they are all arbitrary and whimsical and depend heavily on third party reporting.

      There were people I know who valued the service and (the sorry fucks) built a life or a business around it have been fucked beyond measure by hateful and false reporting, which lead to disabled and closed accounts.

      Playing the facebook game is like playing with that nuclear war computer - there is no way to win.

      The only way to win is to shun the Zucker.

      And I am uncomfortable to say it out loud, but hosts file works well enough for that, no even need for apks to edit it.

      Use it :)

      • by Anonymous Coward

        "The only way to win is to shun the Zucker." Why does Facebook get blamed for how people use or misuse the social platform he created? Facebook is being blamed because they are not doing a perfect job censoring the content posted by others. Facebook is basically being told they need to protect the stupid and gullible? People who are to stupid to recognize that finding truthful information on the Internet is almost impossible unless you are willing to track down multiple sources. Even the major media outlets

        • by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @03:44AM (#58235986)

          Why does Facebook get blamed

          Dunno, really. Could it be because they are a bunch of sleazy fucktards, who collect information that the Stazi would not without telling the users what exactly they have on them? Or because they hire experts to help them play the human psychology so that using FB becomes addictive? Or because they habitually lie about what they do with the collected information? Could it be because they keep shadow profiles for people who are not interested in their services? Perhaps because they pay the likes of Samsung to get their spyware preinstalled on phones in unremovable ways?

          Who knows... It is hard to imagine why people don't like them.

        • > Why does Facebook get blamed for how people use or misuse the social platform he created?

          Because Facebook is a publisher, not a platform, and should be treated as such.

          If Facebook were a platform, they would have no business censoring content that disagrees with.

          If Facebook is a publisher (which they clearly are) then Face is responsible for anything and everything that is posted.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        It is almost like they could use their criterion for "fake account" to their own advantage.

        • Yeah. Or to cover their asses, whatever works in a given situation.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Why would they bother? It's their platform, they can ban anyone they like for any or no reason. Generic "TOS violation" has been a thing forever.

          • > It's their platform, they can ban anyone they like for any or no reason

            No. If Facebook can ban anyone they like for any or no reason, then Facebook is a publisher, not a platform.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        What is a "fake" accunt anyway? At least in the EU, Facebook has got no formal right to ask you, citizen, for your papers when you create an account, which makes pretty much all their accounts from EU "fake".

        Sure. All EU accounts are "fake"...right up to the point where that "fake" account owner submits a GDPR request.

        Ironically, the very privacy EU citizens demanded will also be the very tool used to specifically identify them.

        • Ironically, the very privacy EU citizens demanded will also be the very tool used to specifically identify them.

          Not at all. When I submit a GDPR request to the authorities for violations of my privacy by a website that the website has refused to rectify, I may have to identify myself to the authorities to show that I am a side in that particular case. But I need to file a GDPR request like this only if that particular website is not in compliance, and it isn't the company that will receive my personal infor

          • it isn't the company that will receive my personal information.

            But don't the authorities then have to give that information to the website owners?

            "Remove this person from your website."
            "What person?"
            "We can't tell you. That's private."

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @03:52AM (#58236006) Homepage Journal

        What is a "fake" accunt anyway?

        One run by the Internet Research Agency out of St. Petersberg during office hours, acting in unison with the other 99 accounts being run from the same room.

        There are no transparent, open and reasonable criteria from Facebook on what various transgressions constitute "policy violation", they are all arbitrary and whimsical and depend heavily on third party reporting.

        Indeed, and Facebook makes very minimal effort to even follow up reports from third parties.

        • by The1stImmortal ( 1990110 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @04:05AM (#58236056)

          What is a "fake" accunt anyway?

          One run by the Internet Research Agency out of St. Petersberg during office hours, acting in unison with the other 99 accounts being run from the same room.

          Or a PR/marketing firm in New York or London or LA. Hell, most web marketing firms do this. Not to mention personal PR, business marketing agencies, ad companies propping up their own stats for clients, and of course political marketing people. It's basically par for the course. Common practice. I'd not be surprised if there were more such accounts than real humans on FB. Twitter certainly seems that way.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          One run by the Internet Research Agency out of St. Petersberg during office hours, acting in unison with the other 99 accounts being run from the same room.

          Ah, we're back at the "Russian trolls" excuse. I recall a few months ago Twitter banned a bunch of Bulgarian accounts [theverge.com] for the sole reason that they wrote in Cyrillic alphabet, were from the capital city of Bulgaria and were active roughly during the daytime over there, thereby fulfilling all your criteria.

          The irony was most of those blocked were the exac

        • One run by the Internet Research Agency out of St. Petersberg during office hours, acting in unison with the other 99 accounts being run from the same room.

          That was actually far more logical and articulate than usual for you; are you sure you're not 99 different shills running your account from the same room? ;)

        • Petersburg, not Petersberg.
          Both burg and berg are germanic words, they might even sound alike when spoken with an English pronounciation, yet they mean two completely different things.

          A burg is a castle, a berg is a mountain.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Facebook deletes 100 accounts, only 999,999,900 to go or thereabouts. I'll bet there is an internal rating system for this, approved fake accounts and unapproved fake accounts, you pay, you can have all the fake accounts you want, you don't pay and they might eventually kick you off.

      "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity." An eponymous law, probably named after a Robert J. Hanlon, it is a philosophical razor which suggests a way of eliminating unlikely explanations for human behavior.

      Then again, the ultimate question is not good or evil, it is which choice makes Facebook more money, so your explanation probably fits better. It's not malice. That is a different form of evil. No, this is pure capitalism unfettered by any chains of morality. In esse

    • by edis ( 266347 )

      You don't pay Facebook for having an account - so, that much for it.

      Sure, they have had very articulated filtering of at least top 100, if not all-mutually-related-100, that there is.

      Most interesting in this story to me is WHO IS WELL FUNDING EFFORT OF KEEPING WESTERN SOCIETIES DISINTEGRATED?
      Not that it was well or even vaguely answered.

  • with the Atheists? It's bizarre, because you'd think the last folks who would be buddy buddy with the right are the Atheists, what with the right usually getting in bed with Evangelicals. Not that there aren't plenty of left wing Atheists (Aronra comes to mind. And Genetic Skeptic) but still.
    • by bestweasel ( 773758 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @12:45AM (#58235666)

      It is bizarre because atheism is mainstream and popular in the UK and evangelicals and religion in general have little influence. If this is Putin's mob trying to stir up enmity again, then they might have been wasting their time.

      • It is bizarre because atheism is mainstream and popular in the UK

        It is: it's the normal sort of atheism where people simply don't believe in god and get on with their lives. Not the internet atheism which seems to revolve around being as loud and obnoxious as possible about it.

      • Another day, another âoeRussian Boogeyman!!!â Post.
        At this point, itâ(TM)s more scary that people actually believe thereâ(TM)s *that many* Russian bots infiltrating us here, than the actual thought of the Russians doing it.

        For a start if we need to worry about a country, it ainâ(TM)t Russia. Itâ(TM)s big and itâ(TM)s red and we buy EVERYTHING from them.

      • by Jzanu ( 668651 )
        Yeah, it was a mostly wasteful exercise except for training for future interventions. Vladimir Putin is a demon with no soul who hates humanity and sows destruction whenever possible.
    • by meglon ( 1001833 )

      The operation was spread over Facebook and Instagram and used a network of fake accounts to pose as both far-right activists and their opponents

    • Atheism is not a political position but one of sanity. So, by definition, not a political position...

    • Same question to you: Do you know more than the article says? All the article says is that an organization with "atheist" in the name got banned. That doesn't make it an atheist organization. Organizations can pick their own name, even if their believes, plans and actions have nothing to do with their name.

      For reference, see NSDAP.

      • by Anonymous Coward
        Are you telling us the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is not really Korean?
      • by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @05:03AM (#58236182)

        Exactly. And given that the "European Research Group" is staunchly anti-European, it is probably just as likely that the "Atheists Research Centre" is an organisation for religious nutjobs.

        • it is probably just as likely that the "Atheists Research Centre" is an organisation for religious nutjobs.

          My first interaction with something resembling the Internet was through Compuserve's forums a 1200bps modem and a £0.05/min phone line. Which was clunky enough. I go nosing around - "Is there anything interesting here?"

          It mush have been shortly after some USian massacre by a gun-nut - which could be any random week - because I saw a forum called "Gun Control" and thought "That may be inter

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        I only read the summary and the group names looked like Atheists, people against far right extremists and some neutral people, so fuck knows where the person to whom you replied got the impression atheists and people on the far right are somehow aligned.

        So I guess the answer to their stupid question is simple: No, I haven't noticed.

    • by poity ( 465672 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @04:43AM (#58236126)

      Skeptics are now more often cast as "far right".
      Call out Christian BS 15 years ago? Cool dude.
      Call out Muslim BS now? FAR RIGHT RACIST BIGOT.
      Don't believe three-letter government agencies 15 years ago? Smart independent thinking dude.
      Don't believe three-letter government agencies now? FAR RIGHT RUSSIAN BOT.
      Resisting the constant shifting of definitions 15 years ago? Haha George Carlin is pretty badass.
      Resisting the constant shifting of definitions now? YOU ARE BAD AND AN ASS AND FAR RIGHT.

      • Only if that scepticism is not consistent.

        • by malkavian ( 9512 )

          I'm a skeptic, and pretty consistent. I've spent years combing through the published papers, and working out which ones are based on evidence, and which are based on pseudoscience and opinion.
          While not a guarantee I'm right in things, it sets the bar pretty high in most of the things I'd debate on (always open to being swayed by good evidence, but it rarely appears).
          Stating what the evidence shows often gets me the label of 'far right' or so on, despite being fairly oriented with the moderate left (US poli

          • gets me the label of 'far right' or so on, despite being fairly oriented with the moderate left (US political surveys always peg me as a Democrat).

            That would be about right. By the standards of the Rest of The World, the 95% that isn't American, then a fairly left wing person (by American standards) would be counted as a ravening right winger. But for some peculiar reason, Americans don't see themselves for the small and peculiar minority that they are.

      • Thank you and EXACTLY what I was attempting to say.

        This this and this. The left has changed, a lot. Extremist group now.

      • pivoted to a lot far right, mostly anti-SJW stuff. Part of that is that the anti-SJW stuff gets clicks. Also there's a lot of right wing think tanks and they've been helping signal boost the right wing skeptic pundits and provided them with valuable consulting advice on how to grow communities.

        That said none of that would matter if there wasn't a community receptive of their message. The SJW stuff is super popular, as is the gamer gate and anti-feminism stuff. But it's weird and a little disheartening t
    • Ever since #elevatorgate atheists were cast out of the SJW left. Remember that? A dork made an artless pass at a woman in an elevator and she claimed victim status. Instead of falling in line, the atheist community mocked her for being a fragile snowflake. Bad move, after elevatorgate they were finished as a movement.
    • Iâ(TM)m sorry to say this to you, but I strongly suspect youâ(TM)re from the far far left / crazy SJW crowd (yes, dismiss my post for using the pejorative SJW, sorry but itâ(TM)s the simplest description)

      The extreme left, appear to take issue with *anyone* who isnâ(TM)t also, extreme left.

      What this has caused, is that previously, quite normal lefties, have become either unchanged but now defined as âfar right!â(TM) Because they dare disagree with the extreme left, or theyâ

    • by Anonymous Coward

      > It's bizarre, because you'd think the last folks who would be buddy buddy with the right are the Atheists, what with the right usually getting in bed with Evangelicals.

      The far right is purely opportunistic/utilitarian, they'll (pretend to) be anything that they think will further their goal. In this particular example they are even on both sides of the argument (right vs left).

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Hitler, as is commonly known, was a vegetarian. What is somewhat less known is that despite that he regularly ate meat. While he was big on rules, he wasn't big on following them himself. Note he was also the head of a "socialist" party that privatized state industries and courted the support of powerful capitalists at the expense of small businesses.

      Don't try to make sense of what these people *say*, because it makes no sense. What they *do*, however, is worth paying attention to. A tiny fringe group

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Is it those pesky Russians at the Internet Research Agency again? I bet it is. If only our bare-chested comrade would do something to improve his own people's lot instead of stealing from them, cutting their pensions and trying to bring other countries down to his crooked level.

  • ... we don't want our services to be used to manipulate people ...

    The information-theoretical definition of "reception of information" is that the receiver's behavior changes as a result.

    So if their services "don't manipulate people", they're not sending any information that the people actually receive.

    This corresponds to "duckspeak" - both Big Brother's and Donald Duck's, in two different but related ways:

    * Like 1984's it consists only of the inner party's approved messages (which the listeners al

  • Prompted by unnamed aggrieved parties with an agenda.

    Oh well at least this time it seems to be a mostly left leaning bunch of groups. Normal people would reflect that maybe censorship is a bad thing for everyone, I expect the people behind this will just try harder to make certain they're the ones that get to censor.

    • by meglon ( 1001833 ) on Friday March 08, 2019 @01:45AM (#58235772)
      The groups were designed to look like sides.... both right and left.... being at odds with each other. The people behind the groups... which is what is important... were neither, they were simply trying to sow discord by controlling groups purporting to be from both sides.
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        they were simply trying to sow discord by controlling groups purporting to be from both sides.

        No, they were not.

        Yes, they were.

        No, they were not.

        Yes, they were.

        No, they were not.

        Yes, they were.

        .
        .
        .

  • Had Facebook worked on this shit a lot earlier, the current global political trend of far-right populism would probably have been prevented. Now, you have people like Duterte, Trump, Erdogan, Bolsonaro, Modi, et al, running a significant portion of the world.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I literally have a spare account for both Twitter and Facebook.

    I would call neither a fake account nor a hate account, I do post my actual opinion on several topics which the regressive, hypocritical far left would gladly dox me for though and fire me.

    I try my best to not be hateful, I do end up speaking with some nasty people, sure. But in our current world, if you say "I think our immigration rate is too high and unsustainable, leading to wage stagnation and difficulty finding work" to the wrong people, i

    • Just so you know, however benign your motivations, that's still in direct violation of Facebook's TOS which actually requires your personal information to be complete and accurate.

      They could kick all of your accounts off their platform at any time for this, but they probably won't. The accounts in question that they did kick off were kicked off because excessive spam-botting (automated software controlling literally thousands of "puppet" accounts) was being abusively and obviously used to manipulate public

      • (Oh yea, and the detectable botting really shoots holes in the advertising revenue stream, so I'm sure that is a big motivation for Facebook too.)

      • by edis ( 266347 )

        Thing is, it was used to manipulate public discourse in very organic way of polarization, albeit, using intensifying manipulation.

        This is hybrid war, set by one eternal KGB officer, to my guess.

  • attracted about 175,000 followers on Facebook, and a further 4,500 on Instagram

    In other words, an open communication 'marketplace' was working as expected and almost no one was paying attention to their crap factory. Those numbers are pathetically low, and still provide no data at all on whether any of this vanishingly small percentage of accounts even paid attention to any of the crap.

  • ... to "justify" the creation of media social profiles that spread misinformation: for the mainteiners, it's only "a joke" (tell that to my grandma [and several other people], that believes it...)

news: gotcha

Working...