Facebook removed 30 pages, 33 accounts, and three groups, as well as 16 Instagram accounts, belonging to Iranians trying to sneakily influence U.S. and UK politics, the social media company announced Oct. 26.
“Despite attempts to hide their true identities, a manual review of these accounts linked their activity to Iran.”
At least one of the nixed Facebook pages had more than 1 million followers, while about 25,000 users had joined at least one of the groups. At least one of the scrapped Instagram accounts had more than 28,000 followers.
‘Inauthentic’
The purge was a part of Facebook’s move against “coordinated inauthentic behavior” ahead of the Nov. 6 midterm elections.The company previously described such behavior as “using fake accounts or multiple accounts with the same names” and “networks of accounts or Pages working to mislead others about who they are, and what they are doing.”
In the most recent case, however, Facebook found no ties to the Iranian government. “We can’t say for sure who is responsible,” it stated.
A Facebook spokesman told The Epoch Times the Iranians “engaged in coordinated inauthentic behavior, which violates our policies.”
Election Purge
Facebook’s targeting of “inauthentic behavior” has drawn criticism as the company also shut down hundreds of accounts and pages of Americans who posted political content. In at least some cases, the affected people didn’t appear to have engaged in any nefarious activity.‘Chaotic’ Enforcement
Former senior Facebook engineer Brian Amerige said the company’s content rules were “chaotically, almost randomly enforced” and mistakes would be occasionally reversed only after scrutiny from by the media.Amerige left the company after failed efforts to change what he called a “political monoculture.” He specifically disagreed with Facebook’s insistence on fighting “hate speech.”
He argued defining what is hateful is too subjective to penalize in a principled manner.
“Hate speech can’t be defined consistently and it can’t be implemented reliably, so it ends up being a series of one-off ‘pragmatic’ decisions,” he said.
He eventually reached an impasse with Facebook leadership on this point and decided to quit.