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Revealed: QAnon Facebook groups are growing at a
rapid pace around the world
Guardian investigation finds the Facebook communities
are gaining followers as Twitter cracks down on QAnon content
Julia
Carrie Wong
@juliacarriew Email
Tue 11 Aug
2020 11.00 BSTLast modified on Tue 11 Aug 2020 14.14 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/11/qanon-facebook-groups-growing-conspiracy-theory
New and
established QAnon groups on Facebook are growing at a rapid pace and helping to
spread the baseless and dangerous conspiracy theory to new countries around the
world, a Guardian investigation has found.
The
Guardian has documented more than 170 QAnon groups, pages and accounts across
Facebook and Instagram with more than 4.5 million aggregate followers. The
Guardian has also documented dedicated communities for QAnon followers in at
least 15 countries on Facebook.
The growth
in the QAnon Facebook communities has come as rival social media platform
Twitter undertook a broad crackdown on content and accounts dedicated to the
conspiracy theory, citing the movement’s “clear and well-documented
informational, physical, societal and psychological offline harm”.
At the time
of Twitter’s crackdown, anonymous sources told the New York Times that Facebook
was planning to take “similar steps” at some point this month. In the meantime,
Facebook’s recommendation algorithm has continued to promote QAnon groups to
users and some groups have experienced explosive growth.
QAnon is a baseless internet conspiracy theory whose
followers believe that Donald Trump is waging a secret war against a “deep
state” cabal of Democrats and Hollywood celebrities engaging in pedophilia and
sex trafficking. The theory evolved from the 2016 “pizzagate” conspiracy theory
and has grown to have real-world political impact. Numerous QAnon adherents are
running for elected office as Republicans; the FBI has identified QAnon as a
potential domestic terrorism threat.
In late
June, the Guardian reported that the QAnon community on Facebook included more than
100 Facebook pages, profiles, groups and Instagram accounts with at least 1,000
followers or members each. The largest of those groups had more than 150,000
followers or members, and overall the accounts, groups and pages counted more
than 3 million aggregate followers or members.
As of
Sunday 9 August, the aggregate following of those previously documented groups,
pages and accounts had grown by 34% to over 4m. The largest groups have grown
to include more than 200,000 members.
The
Guardian also documented an additional 73 groups and pages dedicated to QAnon
with at least 1,000 followers or members each. Many of those 73 groups are
brand new – founded in May 2020 or later – and they have already amassed an
aggregate following of more than 560,000 people.
These newer
groups and pages also demonstrate the spread of QAnon around the world. They
include groups dedicated to QAnon followers in the United Kingdom, Northern
Ireland, Canada, Australia, Mexico, Brazil, Germany, Poland, the Netherlands,
Bulgaria, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Romania, Serbia and Slovenia. The
largest international QAnon groups documented by the Guardian were German,
Italian, Polish, Dutch, Australian and British.
“Enforcing
against QAnon on Facebook is not new: we consistently take action against
accounts, Groups, and Pages tied to QAnon that break our rules,” a Facebook
spokesperson who asked not to be identified by name due to safety concerns said
in a statement. “Just last week, we removed a large Group with QAnon
affiliations for violating our content policies, and removed a network of
accounts for violating our policies against coordinated inauthentic behavior.
We have teams assessing our policies against QAnon and are currently exploring
additional actions we can take.”
The removed
group had nearly 200,000 members and was banned for repeated violations of
Facebook’s rules against bullying, harassment, hate speech and harmful
misinformation. A spokesperson at the time confirmed that the removal was a
“one-off” enforcement action and not part of any broader policy shift. The
network removed for coordinated inauthentic behavior was relatively tiny, with
just 1,600 followers on Facebook and 7,200 on Instagram.
An internal
investigation by Facebook found thousands of QAnon groups and pages with more
than 3 million aggregate followers, NBC News reported on Monday. Those figures
were part of the preliminary results of an investigation into QAnon by Facebook
employees obtained by NBC News. Facebook has been looking into QAnon “since at
least June”, according to the report.
“The
response from all social platforms to the harm and threat of QAnon has been
slow and anemic,” said Travis View, a researcher and co-host of QAnon
Anonymous, a podcast that documents and debunks QAnon. “But Facebook stands
alone in how much it has enabled this conspiracy theory-driven extremist
community.”
Facebook stands
alone in how much it has enabled this conspiracy theory driven extremist
community
Travis View, researcher
“Not
content with merely hosting QAnon propaganda, Facebook continues to recommend
QAnon groups to users, essentially providing free marketing for a movement that
has already inspired people to commit terrorism, murder and conspiracy to
commit kidnapping,” View added.
Facebook is
considering an approach to QAnon similar to its policies on anti-vaccine
propaganda, according to NBC News. Such an approach would probably involve
removing groups from search results and Facebook’s recommendation algorithms
rather than banning them outright.
Brian
Friedberg, a senior researcher at the Harvard Shorenstein Center’s Technology
and Social Change Project, warned that Facebook needs to be incredibly careful
about how it manages any crackdown on QAnon, especially with the election
approaching. Since QAnon adherents already believe that the truth of secret
pedophile cabals is being suppressed by the liberal media, a crackdown could
serve to reinforce unfounded beliefs.
“We want to
stop QAnon because it’s degrading trust in our institutions, spreading medical
misinformation and potentially fostering violent extremism,” Friedberg said.
“Without an explanation as to why QAnon content is being banned, this is not
going to do anything to deter the beliefs of the communities.”
Friedberg
said that effectively combating QAnon will probably require “factual
interventions” from conservative media outlets and leaders who are trusted by
those most likely to believe in QAnon – older, white, conservative evangelical
Christians.
“As QAnon
seems to be largely centered around support for Trumpian politics, there needs
to be intervention from the conservative members of their trusted partners,” he
said. “What if PragerU decided to do a two-week-long series debunking QAnon?
“The goal
isn’t the suppression of speech,” he added. “The goal is rebuilding trust in
our institutions and electoral politics.”

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