Facebook removes Pakistani accounts over 'inauthentic behaviour'

In all, the company removed more than 800 Facebook and Instagram accounts, pages and groups in August, its report on coordinated inauthentic behaviour revealed on Tuesday.

This included two other networks: one based in Russia and focusing on the US, UK, Algeria and Egypt; and one based in the US and focused on Venezuela, Mexico and Bolivia.

The largest network was based in Pakistan and consisted of 453 Facebook accounts, 103 pages, 78 groups and 107 Instagram accounts, the report said.

Facebook shared details of the network with the Stanford Internet Observatory Cyber Policy Centre days before taking down the pages.

The network encouraged members of its groups to use an extension to Google's Chrome browser developed for the purpose of automating the reporting of content on Facebook and its associated platforms.

The aim of the network appeared primarily to be to silence critics of Pakistan's government and armed forces, as well as certain forms of religious expression.

Many of the Instagram accounts appeared to primarily have been removed because they were being operated from Pakistan while being claiming to represent Indian nationals.

In total, the reach of the network was significant, Facebook said, with about 70,000 accounts following one or more of the pages, about 1.1 million members and 11,000 followers on Instagram.

Original article
Author: Aljazeera

News, analysis from the Middle East & worldwide, multimedia & interactives, opinions, documentaries, podcasts, long reads and broadcast schedule.

Aljazeera has recently written 11 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Draft legislation would require the firms to pay Australian publishers for displaying their news content, a world first". (December 9, 2020)
  2. "Twitters Dorsey takes some responsibility for Capitol Hill riot, while Facebooks and Alphabets chiefs deflect blame". (March 26, 2021)
  3. "Generals who seized power on Monday claim people using platforms to create instability as UN says coup must fail". (February 4, 2021)
  4. "European Union members decision to take a joint stance in the privacy talks represents the end of a three-year impasse". (February 10, 2021)
  5. "Facebook says hackers used site to lure activists, journalists, dissidents to other ones containing links to malware". (March 25, 2021)
  6. "Facebook says the measure to combat misinformation will continue, even as US state Georgia prepares for Senate runoffs". (November 12, 2020)
  7. "Facebook and Apple are at odds over new rules on tracking users activity". (February 3, 2021)
  8. "Australias parliament passed landmark legislation on Thursday requiring global tech giants to pay for news content". (February 26, 2021)
  9. "Concentration of power in small number of tech firms is curtailing growth and innovation, says UKs digital secretary". (November 27, 2020)
  10. "Australia PM says government talking to tech giant as standoff results in decline of traffic to country news sites". (February 20, 2021)
  11. "Removed from web hosting services in January, Parler is a favourite of conservatives who decry censorship". (February 15, 2021)
Posted on  ,