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Facebook removes hundreds of accounts tied to Iran

February 1, 2019 at 3:48 am

Two girls sit in coffee shop using Facebook and doing online fashion clothing in Tehran, Iran on 13 October 2013 [Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images]

Facebook said Thursday it had removed 783 accounts that were part of a campaign of “coordinated, inauthentic behaviour” tied to Iran, Anadolu reports.

“The Page administrators and account owners typically represented themselves as locals, often using fake accounts, and posted news stories on current events,” Nathaniel Gleicher, head of cybersecurity policy at Facebook, said in a statement.

The announcement comes as the company builds on previous investigations into fake accounts originating in Iran that have been circulating content on its social network.

The majority of the activity was centred in the Middle East and South Asia, in addition to other countries such as Albania and South Africa. But the accounts also targeted the US

Almost simultaneously, Twitter published its 2018 Midterm Elections report, which stated that the social media company had suspended networks of different accounts that were engaging in disinformation campaigns across the globe.

Read: General says Iran will not give up disputed Gulf islands

Twitter said it had confirmed that the accounts identified as Russian were actually from there, but it was unable to link them to the Russian Internet Research Agency, which is accused of playing a role in the interference of the 2016 US presidential election.

Roughly 2 million election-related tweets came from these “malicious” Russian accounts last year, it noted.

Twitter added that it had removed accounts linked to Iran and Venezuela as well.

“As part of our ongoing review, we found limited operations that have the potential to be connected to sources within Iran, Venezuela and Russia,” it said in a statement.