Oakland: Facebook said on Tuesday that it removed a small network of accounts and pages linked to Russia’s Internet Research Agency, the troll factory that has used social media accounts to sow political discord in the US since the 2016 presidential election.
Twitter also suspended five related accounts. The company said the tweets from these Russia-linked accounts were low quality and spammy and that most received few if any, likes or retweets.
The people behind the accounts recruited unwitting freelance journalists to post in English and Arabic, mainly targeting left-leaning audiences. Facebook said Tuesday the network’s activity focused on the US, UK, Algeria and Egypt, and other English-speaking countries and countries in the Middle East and North Africa.
The company said it started investigating the network based on information from the FBI about its off-Facebook activities. The network was in the early stages of development, Facebook added and saw nearly no engagement on Facebook before it was removed. The network consisted of 13 Facebook accounts and two pages. About 14,000 accounts followed one or more of the pages, though the English-language page had a little over 200 followers, Facebook said.
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Still, its presence points to ongoing Russian efforts to disrupt the US election and sow political discord in an already divided country. To evade detection, the people behind the network recruited Americans to do their bidding, likely unknowingly, both as journalists and as people authorized to purchase political advertisements in the US.
Facebook said the people behind the network posted about global events ranging from racial justice in the US and the UK, NATO, the QAnon conspiracy, President Donald Trump, and Joe Biden's presidential campaign. The network spent about $480 on advertising on Facebook, primarily in US dollars. However, Facebook said less than $2 worth of those ads targeted the US.
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