Meta Removes Coordinated Propaganda Efforts by China and Russia

<p>Meta&comma; the parent company of Facebook&comma; said it took down two covert influence operations — from China and Russia — that were violating the company&&num;8217&semi;s policy against Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior &lpar;CIB&rpar;&period; Meta shared this information with peers at tech companies&comma; security researchers&comma; governments and law enforcement so they too can take appropriate action&period; At the end of the full report&comma; the company is also including threat indicators to help the security community detect and counter malicious activity elsewhere on the internet&period; See the full <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;about&period;fb&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2022&sol;09&sol;CIB-Report&lowbar;-China-Russia&lowbar;Sept-2022-1-1&period;pdf">CIB Report<&sol;a> for more information&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Here’s what the company found&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2><b>China<&sol;b><&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Meta took down a small network that originated in China and targeted the United States&comma; the Czech Republic and to a lesser extent&comma; Chinese- and French-speaking audiences around the world&period; It included four largely separate and short-lived efforts&comma; each focused on a particular audience at different times between the Fall of 2021 and mid-September 2022&period; In the United States&comma; it targeted people on both sides of the political spectrum&semi; in Czechia&comma; this activity was primarily anti-government&comma; criticizing the state’s support of Ukraine in the war with Russia and its impact on the Czech economy&comma; using the criticism to caution against antagonizing China&period; Each cluster of accounts — around half a dozen each — posted content at low volumes during working hours in China rather than when their target audiences would typically be awake&period; Few people engaged with it and some of those who did called it out as fake&period; The company&&num;8217&semi;s automated systems took down a number of accounts and Facebook Pages for various Community Standards violations&comma; including impersonation and inauthenticity&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This operation ran across multiple social media&comma; including Facebook&comma; Instagram&comma; Twitter and two Czech petition platforms&period; This was the first Chinese network disrupted that focused on US domestic politics ahead of the midterm elections&comma; as well as Czechia’s foreign policy toward China and Ukraine&period; Chinese influence operations that were disrupted before typically focused on criticizing the United States to international audiences&comma; rather than primarily targeting domestic audiences in the US&period; A network that was taken down in 2020 included a very limited effort to post about US politics&comma; but <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;about&period;fb&period;com&sol;news&sol;2020&sol;09&sol;removing-coordinated-inauthentic-behavior-china-philippines&sol;">primarily<&sol;a> focused on the Philippines and Southeast Asia&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2><b>Russia<&sol;b><&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Meta took down a large network that originated in Russia and targeted primarily Germany&comma; and also France&comma; Italy&comma; Ukraine and the United Kingdom with narratives focused on the war in Ukraine&period; The operation began in May of this year and centered around a sprawling network of over 60 websites carefully impersonating legitimate websites of news organizations in Europe&comma; including Spiegel&comma; The Guardian and Bild&period; There&comma; they would post original articles that criticized Ukraine and Ukrainian refugees&comma; supported Russia and argued that Western sanctions on Russia would backfire&period; They would then promote these articles and also original memes and YouTube videos across many internet services&comma; including Facebook&comma; Instagram&comma; Telegram&comma; Twitter&comma; petitions websites Change&period;org and Avaaz&comma; and even LiveJournal&period; Throughout our investigation&comma; as we blocked this operation’s domains&comma; they attempted to set up new websites&comma; suggesting persistence and continuous investment in this activity across the internet&period; They operated primarily in English&comma; French&comma; German&comma; Italian&comma; Spanish&comma; Russian and Ukrainian&period; On a few occasions&comma; the operation’s content was amplified by the Facebook Pages of Russian embassies in Europe and Asia&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Meta began its investigation after reviewing public reporting into a portion of this activity by <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;t-online&period;de&sol;nachrichten&sol;deutschland&sol;gesellschaft&sol;id&lowbar;100042596&sol;ukraine-krieg-prorussische-kampagne-das-steckt-hinter-den-fake-artikeln&period;html">investigative<&sol;a> <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;zdf&period;de&sol;nachrichten&sol;politik&sol;desinformation-kampagne-facebook-ukraine-krieg-russland-100&period;html">journalists<&sol;a> in Germany&period; The researchers at the Digital Forensic Research Lab also provided insights into a part of this network&comma; and the company shared findings with them to enable further research into the broader operation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This is the largest and most complex Russian-origin operation that has been disrupted since the beginning of the war in Ukraine&period; It presented an unusual combination of sophistication and brute force&period; The spoofed websites and the use of many languages demanded both technical and linguistic investment&period; The amplification on social media&comma; on the other hand&comma; relied primarily on crude ads and fake accounts&period; In fact&comma; the majority of accounts&comma; Pages and ads on our platforms were detected and removed by the company&&num;8217&semi;s automated systems before we even began our investigation&period; Together&comma; these two approaches worked as an attempted smash-and-grab against the information environment&comma; rather than a serious effort to occupy it long-term&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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