Twitter said Friday it had suspended thousands of accounts linked to a manipulation effort stemming from Saudi Arabia, in the latest social media crackdown on state-sponsored propaganda efforts.
The online service said some 88,000 accounts being blocked were linked to Saudi state-backed “information operations” in violation of Twitter’s platform manipulation rules.
Twitter removes 88,000 accounts tied to Saudi Arabia, citing concerns over misinformation, spam https://t.co/YBNsoHkOaT pic.twitter.com/JIrxvalHS8
— The Hill (@thehill) December 20, 2019
Most of the accounts were in Arabic and aimed at “amplifying messages favorable to Saudi authorities,” but that some English language content was aimed at “Western audiences.”
“Our internal analysis shows the network was involved in various forms of platform manipulation, targeting discussions related to Saudi Arabia and advancing their geopolitical interests on the world stage,” the Twitter safety team said in a blog post.
Twitter said it released details on 5,929 accounts which it called a “representative sample” of the 88,000 suspicious accounts. Twitter’s investigations traced the source of the coordinated activity to the Saudi-based social media marketing firm Smaat, which has been permanently blocked from the platform.
A recent report by the Oxford Internet Institute found manipulation efforts have doubled over the past two years and are being used in 56 countries
Smaat was working for “high-profile individuals,” Twitter said, and several government departments in Saudi Arabia, using automated tools “to mask the overall platform manipulation originating from these accounts.”
Some of the tweets in question date back to 2016 and appear to be supportive of President Donald Trump or his campaign. One dated November 11, 2016 showed a photo of billionaire George Soros — a frequent target of conservatives — and said Trump should put him “on the FBI most wanted list.”
Another from October 2016 showed a picture of former president Bill Clinton and said: “You don’t even need these polls, Donald Trump won. You can read it on Bill Clinton’s face.”
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Separate effort on Facebook
Separately on Friday, Facebook said it had blocked a network in Vietnam and the US, and focused mainly on the United States which also posted pro-Trump messages.
The social media giant said it had also thwarted a separate network targeting domestic audiences in the country of Georgia.
Facebook said the effort originating in Vietnam used the multi-language media group Epoch Times, which is linked to the Falun Gong spiritual movement, and a US media outlet called BL, which has been posting pro-Trump messages.
Removing Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior From Georgia, Vietnam and the US https://t.co/vIv7eW1TV5 pic.twitter.com/7jOqc3TVzL
— Meta Newsroom (@MetaNewsroom) December 20, 2019
The California-based company added that it removed more than 600 accounts on Facebook and Instagram.
“The people behind this activity made widespread use of fake accounts — many of which had been automatically removed by our systems — to manage pages and groups, automate posting at very high frequencies and direct traffic to off-platform sites,” Facebook security chief Nathaniel Gleicher said.
“The BL-focused network repeatedly violated a number of our policies, including our policies against coordinated inauthentic behavior, spam and misrepresentation, to name just a few.”
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The accounts posted memes and other content on conservative ideology and hot button US political issues including Trump’s impeachment, elections, trade, family values and freedom of religion, Gleicher said.
Struggling against state actors
The moves comes with social media struggling in the face of an array of state-backed disinformation efforts, often using automated accounts or “bots” to manipulate the platforms, amplifying their own messages while disparaging opponents.
Both Facebook and Twitter have acted against manipulation efforts from Russia, Iran and other countries. A recent report by the Oxford Internet Institute found manipulation efforts have doubled over the past two years and are being used in 56 countries.
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The researchers said “sophisticated state actors” from at least seven countries are working outside their borders on global foreign influence operations, using Facebook and Twitter.
The report identified the countries as China, India, Iran, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk.