Advertisement
Advertisement
George Floyd protests
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Facebook plans to stop state-controlled media organisations from China, Russia and elsewhere from buying ads in the US ahead of November’s presidential election. Photo: Reuters

Politico | Facebook slaps labels on Chinese and Russian state-controlled media amid anger over Donald Trump’s posts

  • Warnings will be added to pages of Xinhua News, People’s Daily, Russia Today and Sputnik, among others
  • Company has faced backlash from employees for not adding labels to comments from US president linked to ongoing violence against George Floyd protesters

This story is published in a content partnership with POLITICO. It was originally reported by Mark Scott on politico.com on June 4, 2020

Facebook took steps on Thursday to reduce the role of state-backed media outlets from Russia and China on its global platform amid controversy over how the social networking giant handled recent posts from Donald Trump.

The company has faced a backlash from its employees for not adding warning labels to comments from the US president linked to the ongoing violence across the country.

The tech giant said that it would now add labels to the Facebook pages of Russia Today, Sputnik, Xinhua News and People’s Daily, among others, warning people that these were state-controlled outlets.

Founder Mark Zuckerberg has repeatedly defended Facebook’s lack of warning labels on US President Donald Trump’s posts, saying it was not the company’s responsibility to police political speech. Photo: AFP

Other government-funded publishers that are run independently, such as the British Broadcasting Corporation, would not be included in the labelling, according to the company.

Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebook’s head of cybersecurity policy, told POLITICO that further labels would be added to all ads bought on the global platform by these organisations, as well to their non-paid posts viewed in the US from each outlet’s Facebook pages.

From later this summer, Facebook would also stop state-controlled media organisations from Russia, China and elsewhere from buying ads in the US ahead of November’s presidential election.

The company would not provide a date for when it would start banning these paid-for messages, though these outlets have bought few ads targeting the US, according to a review of Facebook’s transparency tools.

Trump fights claims he stoked violence in escalating Twitter feud

“If we see any of these entities engaging in deceptive behaviour, we will take them down,” said Gleicher, who admitted he had yet to find such activity aimed at undermining the upcoming US vote. “People must understand who is behind the arguments that they are seeing.”

The move is unlikely to quell criticism of how Facebook has handled recent posts from the US president, which many people argued were fomenting violence against protesters who had taken to the streets in anger at the death of George Floyd in the custody of US law enforcement.

01:46

Twitter and Facebook suspend 'China-linked' accounts for misinformation

Twitter and Facebook suspend 'China-linked' accounts for misinformation
Twitter, its smaller social networking rival, posted warning labels to a number of Trump’s tweets which the company said were “glorifying violence”. But Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, refused to take similar action, and has repeatedly defended himself by claiming that it was not the responsibility of his company to police political speech.

By taking aim at state-controlled media outlets – the organisations that will have warning labels added to their Facebook pages include ones from Russia, China, North Korea and Iran – the company is trying to dampen the role they can play in pushing potentially false information to Facebook’s 2.2 billion users worldwide.

In recent days, the likes of Russia Today, China’s Xinhua News and Iran’s PressTV have all run articles and videos of the US protests to their millions of online followers on Facebook, though these organisations have not yet pushed outright falsities on the network.

Trump supporters on Twitter spread Covid-19 rumours about China

Still, European and US officials have repeatedly warned these government-controlled outlets, particularly those backed by the Kremlin, have pushed narratives aimed at undermining Western democracies.

Last year, for instance, Facebook removed more than 350 pages which had portrayed themselves as independent media organisations, but were linked to employees of Sputnik, the Kremlin-backed outlet. These deleted pages had pushed messages critical of the Nato – a regular target for Russian media.

“They’re labelling something,” said Graham Brookie, director of The Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensics Research Laboratory, who tracks misinformation and was consulted about Facebook’s new approach to state-backed outlets. “From what has happened in the last two weeks, that is a departure from what the Facebook chief executive has been saying.”

01:06

Facebook uncovers ‘coordinated’ campaign to disrupt US midterm elections

Facebook uncovers ‘coordinated’ campaign to disrupt US midterm elections

When asked why Facebook would allow these organisations to use its network if there were concerns about deceptive behaviour, Gleicher, the Facebook executive, said it was not the company’s role to ban these outlets, but to provide greater transparency on who was behind them.

A warning label will be added to any post from these outlets’ Facebook pages that is shared by individuals across the network. But a label will not be added to similar articles or videos that people add directly to their own Facebook pages. State-controlled media outlets can appeal to have these labels removed.

“This is about actors’ identification and transparency,” Gleicher said. “We see the problem and challenge with state-controlled media entities around the world.”

Facebook is scrambling to strengthen its digital protections ahead of this year’s US presidential vote after foreign governments, particularly Russia, were accused of meddling in the 2016 vote by the country’s intelligence agencies.

The European Commission also said the Kremlin had targeted last year’s EU parliamentary vote with misinformation, though Brussels has provided little evidence to substantiate those claims.

Gleicher acknowledged the upcoming US election would likely again be targeted by foreign actors, though he said that Facebook had become better at both detecting and removing this activity before it reached voters. The company has taken down a slew of inauthentic activity – both aimed at the US and elsewhere – in the last 12 months.

Still, misinformation experts warned that domestic American groups, many of which have learned lessons from Russia’s involvement in the 2016 presidential vote, may play a greater role in November to push false claims than overseas groups. Facebook’s announcement about labelling state-controlled media would not touch such home-grown activity.

“It’s a step in the right direction,” Laura Rosenberger, a senior fellow at The German Marshall Fund of the United States, a think tank in Washington. “However, this step is a drop in the bucket in terms of what we need to be seeing in how state-backed media is weaponising information.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: labels for state-run media on Facebook
Post