Cyberwarfare

Facebook Parent Meta Links Influence Campaign to US Military

Facebook parent Meta has tied a recent influence operation powered by tens of accounts, pages and groups to the United States military.

<p><strong><span><span>Facebook parent Meta has tied a recent influence operation powered by tens of accounts, pages and groups to the United States military.</span></span></strong></p>

Facebook parent Meta has tied a recent influence operation powered by tens of accounts, pages and groups to the United States military.

The social media giant on Tuesday released its adversarial threat report for the third quarter of 2022. During Q3, in addition to disrupting operations linked to Chinese and Russian threat actors, the company disrupted an operation that has been connected to the United States.

According to Meta, the operation that originated in the US focused on countries such as Afghanistan, Algeria, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Somalia, Syria, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Yemen.

Meta has removed 39 Facebook accounts, 16 pages, and two groups, as well as 26 Instagram accounts related to this operation for violating policies on coordinated inauthentic behavior. However, the company said the campaign actually ran across multiple online services, including YouTube, Twitter, Telegram and the Russian social media sites Odnoklassniki and VKontakte.

According to the social media giant, the influence operation involved posts written mainly in Arabic, Farsi and Russian, covering news, sports, culture and current events. Some of the posts praised the US military while others criticized Iran, Russia and China, including Iran’s influence in the Middle East, China’s treatment of the Uyghurs, and Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Data collected by the company shows that roughly 22,000 accounts had followed one or more of the offending Facebook pages, and 400 accounts joined at least one of the groups. Around 12,000 accounts followed one or more of the instagram accounts. Approximately $2,500 was spent for Facebook ads — the money was paid in British pounds and US dollars.

However, a majority of the posts published as part of the operation had little to no genuine engagement.

“Although the people behind this operation attempted to conceal their identities and coordination, our investigation found links to individuals associated with the US military,” Meta said.

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This campaign was previously detailed in August by Graphika and the Stanford Internet Observatory (SIO), in a report focusing on pro-Western covert influence operations observed over a period of five years. The report did not explicitly say that the US military was behind some of the operations, but the US military was mentioned.

After the report was published, The Washington Post reported that these influence operations had raised concerns in the White House, and the Pentagon had ordered an audit into how clandestine information warfare is conducted.

Meta regularly releases reports detailing the actions taken against misinformation campaigns, but it’s rare for the United States to be named as a source of these campaigns.

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