The social media company said it had suspended a little more
than 2,800 accounts and pages on its main platform and photo-sharing site,
Instagram, for using fake identities and other forms of so-called “coordinated
inauthentic behaviour”.
The activity spanned 11 countries, including Argentina,
Brazil, Morocco, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. In most of those
countries, the networks were focused on forthcoming elections and run by
domestic groups, Facebook said.
“Deceptive campaigns like these raise a complex challenge by
blurring the line between healthy public debate and manipulation,” the company
said in a blog post.
Three of the networks announced on Tuesday were first
exposed last month and used by rival French and Russian groups to spread
competing narratives in the Central African Republic ahead of the country’s
parliamentary election.
Facebook’s operations chief Sheryl Sandberg said on Monday
the company had no plans to lift its block on the accounts of U.S. President
Donald Trump as it clamped down on a misleading phrase that has become a
rallying cry for Trump’s supporters.
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