Fake US election-related accounts proliferating on X, study says
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[May 24, 2024]
By Stephanie Burnett and Helen Coster
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fake accounts posting about the U.S. presidential
election are proliferating on the social media platform X, according to
a social media analysis company's report shared with Reuters exclusively
ahead of its release on Friday.
Analysts from Israeli tech company Cyabra, which uses a subset of
artificial intelligence called machine learning to identify fake
accounts, found that 15% of X accounts praising former President Donald
Trump and criticizing President Joe Biden are fake. The report also
found that 7% of accounts praising Biden, a Democrat, and criticizing
Trump, a Republican, are fake.
Cyabra's study is based on a review of posts on the X platform, formerly
known as Twitter, over two months beginning March 1. The review included
analyzing popular hashtags and determining sentiment in terms of whether
posts are positive, negative or neutral.
The analysis shows that newly detected fake accounts had increased up to
tenfold during March and April.
The report cites 12,391 inauthentic pro-Trump profiles out of 94,363
total and 803 inauthentic pro-Biden profiles out of 10,065 total.
A spokesperson for X did not respond to a request for comment about the
fake accounts, nor did representatives from the White House and Trump
campaign.
X and other social media platforms have been under greater scrutiny
since 2016, when Russia interfered in the U.S. presidential election in
an attempt to boost Trump's candidacy and harm his opponent, Democrat
Hillary Clinton. Election officials and online misinformation experts
are again watching for misleading narratives ahead of the Nov. 5
election.
The fake accounts praising Trump this cycle are part of a coordinated
campaign to sway public opinion and influence online discussions, Cyabra
said. The report did not identify the individuals or groups behind the
campaign.

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A hand is seen on a laptop with binary codes displayed in front of
the USA flag in this illustration taken, August 19, 2022.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Cyabra said it made that determination based on evidence including
the use of identical hashtags and the fact that fake accounts
published posts and comments at the same time. The report found that
the fake pro-Trump accounts pushed two main messages: "Vote for
Trump" and "Biden is the worst president the U.S. has ever had."
"The level of coordination suggests that there is a nefarious
objective and that there is a whole operation in order to change
people's opinion,” said Cyabra’s vice president, Rafi Mendelsohn.
The fake accounts backing Biden are not part of a coordinated
campaign, the report said, as the hallmarks of a coordinated
campaign - such as fake accounts posting at the same time - were not
identified.
X, which was publicly held until its 2022 takeover by billionaire
Elon Musk, has long downplayed the use of fake accounts on its
platform. Twitter said in May 2022 that fewer than 5% of its daily
active users were "false or spam" based on an internal review of
accounts. At the time, Cyabra had estimated that 13.7% of Twitter
profiles were inauthentic.
In an X post on April 4, Musk wrote that a “system purge of bots and
trolls” was under way and that the company “will be tracing the
people responsible and bringing the full force of the law to bear
upon them.” In October the company tested its “Not a Bot” program in
New Zealand and the Philippines to combat bots and spammers.
(Reporting by Stephanie Burnett in Amsterdam and Helen Coster in New
York; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Matthew Lewis)
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