Facebook removes hundreds of fake profiles tied
to pro-Trump group
Social network says accounts tied to Turning Point USA
sought to influence conversations by flooding news articles with comments
Kari Paul
Thu 8 Oct
2020 23.19 BSTLast modified on Thu 8 Oct 2020 23.50 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/oct/08/facebook-trump-turning-point-usa-rally-forge
Facebook
has removed hundreds of fake profiles it has linked to the conservative group
Turning Point USA for carrying out organized attacks on the site, including
attempts to influence public conversations by flooding news articles with
pro-Trump comments and misinformation.
The move
was prompted by reporting last month in the Washington Post that found Turning
Point Action, an affiliated pro-Trump group, was paying teenagers to post
coordinated messages on the site, a violation of Facebook’s rules.
In comments
on news articles, paid users cast doubt on mail-in ballots, praised Trump and
spread misinformation about coronavirus. Facebook traced these profiles to an
Arizona-based communications company called Rally Forge, which it says worked on
behalf of Turning Point USA.
In a
blogpost, Facebook said it had removed 276 fake accounts, including 200
Facebook accounts and 76 Instagram accounts.
Comments by
the accounts addressed topics such as “Covid-19, criticism of the Democratic
party and presidential candidate Joe Biden, and praise of President Trump and
the Republican party”, Facebook said, adding that the efforts violated the
platform’s policy against “coordinated inauthentic behavior”.
These fake
profiles commented most frequently on pages of the Washington Post, Fox News,
MSNBC, CNN and the New York Times, the report from Facebook said. The networks
initially became active before the 2018 midterm elections and went dormant
until June.
Individuals
behind the accounts used stock photos to create fake profiles, many of which
were removed by Facebook’s automated detection software and linked to Rally
Forge. “Although the people behind this network attempted to conceal their
identities and coordination, our investigation linked this activity to Rally
Forge,” Facebook said.
Facebook
said Rally Forge would be banned from the platform as a result. However,
questions have been raised as to why the company has not taken action against
Turning Point USA, despite identifying that Rally Forge was working on the
organization’s behalf. Turning Point USA is still present on Facebook, with
more than 1.8 million followers.
Turning
Point USA said in a statement the allegations were related to Turning Point
Action, an affiliated entity. “The mistake has been flagged with Facebook’s
communication team,” it said. Facebook pushed back, saying there was evidence
linking the two.
Turning
Point Action was founded last year by Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning
Point USA, a Phoenix-based non-profit that recruits college students to
advocate for conservative causes. The group posts memes and videos on its
social media pages that support Trump and other conservative politicians. Trump
and his son Donald Trump Jr have also delivered speeches at Turning Point USA
or Turning Point Action events, most recently during a June campaign rally in
Phoenix.
The
enforcement comes as Twitter and Facebook crack down on inauthentic political
discourse ahead of the US elections in November. Social media firms have also
struggled to rein in posts from Donald Trump, which have spread misinformation
on a mass scale about voting.
Twitter,
meanwhile, announced on Thursday that it had suspended 104 accounts linked to
an Iranian effort to amplify debates over the shooting of George Floyd and
other issues of racial justice in the US.
The
platform said that in some cases, the accounts had been hijacked from their
original owners.
Agencies contributed reporting

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