San Francisco: In one of the largest single crackdowns on state-backed account in its history, Twitter has banned 88,000 accounts which were part of a significant state-backed information operation originated in Saudi Arabia.
The micro-blogging platform only shared details about 5,929 accounts -- to protect the privacy of potentially compromised accounts -- which represented the core portion of a larger network of more than 88,000 accounts engaged in spammy behaviour across a wide range of topics.
Twitter has permanently suspended all of these accounts from its platform.
"In order to protect the privacy of potentially compromised accounts repurposed to engage in platform manipulation, and in response to researcher feedback requesting that we pre-filter unrelated spam, we have not disclosed data for all 88,000 accounts," Twitter said in a statement.
"Primarily, accounts were amplifying messages favourable to Saudi authorities, mainly through inauthentic engagement tactics such as aggressive liking, retweeting and replying," the platform said in a blog post late Friday.
The latest move follows Twitter's action in September in which, the platform banned seven Saudi accounts for similar co-ordinated inauthentic behaviour.
The Saudi government was yet to make a statement on Twitter's action.
While the majority of the content from the new network was in Arabic, a portion of it related to events relevant to Western audiences, including amplification of discussion around sanctions in Iran and appearances by the Saudi government officials in Western media.
"Our investigations have traced the source of the coordinated activity to Smaat, a social media marketing and management company based in Saudi Arabia,' it added.