Facebook fakers get better at covering tracks, security
experts say
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[August 04, 2018]
By Christopher Bing
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Creators of fake
accounts and news pages on Facebook <FB.O> are learning from their past
mistakes and making themselves harder to track and identify, posing new
challenges in preventing the platform from being used for political
misinformation, cyber security experts say.
This was apparent as Facebook tried to determine who created pages it
said were aimed at sowing dissension among U.S. voters ahead of
congressional elections in November. The company said on Tuesday it had
removed 32 fake pages and accounts from Facebook and Instagram involved
in what it called “coordinated inauthentic behavior.”
While the United States improves its efforts to monitor and root out
such intrusions, the intruders keep getting better at it, said cyber
security experts interviewed over the past two days.
Ben Nimmo, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Digital Forensic
Research Lab, said he had noticed the latest pages used less original
language, rather cribbing from copy already on the internet.
"Linguistic mistakes would give them away before, between 2014 and
2017," Nimmo told Reuters. "In some of these newer cases it seems
they’ve caught on to that by writing less (original material) when
posting things. With their longer posts sometimes it’s just pirated,
copy and pasted from some American website. That makes them less
suspicious.”
Facebook’s prior announcement on the topic of fake accounts, in April,
directly connected a Russian group known as the Internet Research Agency
to a myriad of posts, events and propaganda that were placed on Facebook
leading up to the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
This time, Facebook did not identify the source of the misinformation.
“It’s clear that whoever set up these accounts went to much greater
lengths to obscure their true identities than the Russian-based Internet
Research Agency (IRA) has in the past,” the company said in a blog post
on Tuesday announcing the removal of the pages. “Our technical forensics
are insufficient to provide high confidence attribution at this time.”
Facebook said it had shared evidence connected to the latest flagged
posts with several private sector partners, including the Digital
Forensic Research Lab, an organization founded by the Atlantic Council,
a Washington think tank.
Facebook also said the use of virtual private networks, internet phone
services, and domestic currency to pay for advertisements helped
obfuscate the source of the accounts and pages. The perpetrators also
used a third party, which Facebook declined to name, to post content.
Facebook declined to comment further, referring back to its blog post.
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People are silhouetted as they pose with mobile devices in front of
a screen projected with a Facebook logo, in this picture
illustration taken in Zenica, October 29, 2014. REUTERS/Dado
U.S. President Donald Trump's top national security aides said on Thursday that
Russia is behind "pervasive" attempts to interfere in November's elections and
that they expect attempts by Russia, and others, will continue into the 2020
elections.
They say they are concerned that attempts will be made to foment confusion and
anger among various political groups in the United States and cause a distrust
of the electoral process.
Two U.S. intelligence officials who requested anonymity told Reuters this week
there was insufficient evidence to conclude that Russia was behind the latest
Facebook campaign. However, one said “the similarities, aims and methodology
relative to the 2016 Russian campaign are quite striking.”
'PREVIOUS MISTAKES'
Experts who track online disinformation campaigns said the groups who launch
such efforts have changed how they post content and create posts.
"These actors are learning from previous mistakes," said John Kelly, chief
executive of social media intelligence firm Graphika, adding they do not use the
same internet addresses or pay in foreign currency.
"And as more players in the world learn these dark arts, it’s easier for them to
hide among the multiple actors deploying the same playbook,” he said.
Philip Howard, an Oxford University professor of internet studies and director
of the Oxford Internet Institute, said that suspicious social media accounts
like those taken down this week were once more easily identifiable because they
shared the same information from high-profile publications like RT, the Russian
English-language news service, or Breitbart News Network.
But now, the content they often share is more diverse and less discernible,
coming from lesser known sites, including internet forums that mix political
news with other topics, he said.
“The junk news they're sharing is using better quality images, for example, more
believable domains, less-known websites, smaller blogs," Howard added.
U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded that Russia meddled in the 2016
presidential campaign using tactics including fake Facebook accounts. The
Internet Research Agency was one of three Russian companies charged in February
by U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller with conspiracy to tamper with the 2016
election.
Moscow has denied any election interference.
(Reporting by Christopher Bing in Washington; Additional reporting by John
Walcott; Editing by Damon Darlin and Frances Kerry)
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