Facebook takes down white nationalist and fake antifa accounts
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[June 03, 2020]
By Joseph Menn
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Facebook Inc <FB.O>
said Tuesday it has suspended accounts associated with white nationalist
groups after some advocated bringing weapons to the current wave of
anti-racist protests.
Company officials also said they removed accounts falsely claiming
allegiance to antifa in order to bring discredit to the anti-fascist
movement.
Antifa adherents have said they focus on defending people from attacks
by authorities or vigilantes, but they have been vilified by President
Donald Trump who, without citing evidence, said they were instigators of
anti-police violence.
Some of the removed white nationalist accounts were associated with the
Proud Boys, which Facebook previously classified as a dangerous group.
The others had connections to a group called the American Guard, which
is now classified the same way.
Multiple Facebook executives described the action on condition they not
be identified. They said they acted based on behavior, not the politics
of any content, and that Facebook had not designated antifa as
dangerous.
The company said it was looking closer at accounts discussing protests
when it saw what it deemed white nationalist accounts encouraging
violence.
The misleading antifa accounts were removed for "inauthentic behavior,"
because they purported to be something they were not, Facebook said.
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A 3D-printed Facebook logo is seen placed on a keyboard in this
illustration taken March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
As with a false antifa tweet that Twitter Inc <TWTR.N> tied to a
third white nationalist group and which was widely distributed as a
screen shot, the Facebook executives said Tuesday the goal of such
content is often not to win thousands of followers but to plant a
single false flag that can be used to sow distrust about the target
group.
Facebook declined to comment on whether it had been in touch with
law enforcement, which it typically does in cases of an imminent
threat.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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