31 October 2017

Why Rico's not on Facebook

Yahoo has a Reuters article by David Ingram about Facebook's Russian hack:
Facebook Inc. said on Monday that Russia-based operatives published about eighty thousand posts on the social network over a two-year period in an effort to sway American politics and that over a hundred million Americans may have seen the posts during that time.
Facebook's latest data on the Russia-linked posts, possibly reaching around half of the U.S. population of voting age, far exceeds the company's previous disclosures. It was included in written testimony provided to US lawmakers, and seen by Reuters, ahead of key hearings with social media and technology companies about Russian meddling in elections on Capitol Hill this week.
Twitter Inc. separately found nearly three thousand accounts linked to Russian operatives, a source familiar with the company's written testimony said. That estimate is up from a tally of 201 accounts that Twitter reported in September.
Google, owned by Alphabet Inc., said in a statement on Monday it had found nearly five thousand dollars in Russia-linked ad spending during the 2016 election cycle, and that it would build a database of election ads.
Executives from Facebook, Twitter, and Google are scheduled to appear before three congressional committees this week on alleged Russian attempts to spread misinformation in the months before and after the 2016 US presidential election.
The Russian government has denied any attempts to sway the election, in which President Donald Trump, a Republican, defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Facebook's general counsel, Colin Stretch, said in the written testimony that the eighty thousand posts from Russia's Internet Research Agency were a tiny fraction of content on Facebook, equal to one out of twenty-three thousand posts.
However, the posts violated Facebook's terms of service, and any amount of such activity using fake accounts is too much, Stretch wrote. "These actions run counter to Facebook's mission of building community and everything we stand for. And we are determined to do everything we can to address this new threat," he wrote.
The posts were published between June of 2015 and August of 2017. Most of them focused on divisive social and political messages such as race relations, Facebook said.
Twitter's revised estimate of how many Russian-linked accounts were on its service comes a month after an influential Democratic senator, Mark Warner, slammed it for what he called an insufficient investigation.
Twitter has suspended all 2,752 accounts that it tracked to Russia's Internet Research Agency, and it has given US congressional investigators the account names, the source familiar with the company's testimony said. "State-sanctioned manipulation of elections by sophisticated foreign actors is a new challenge for us, and one that we are determined to meet," Twitter said in written testimony, according to the source.
Rico says it's a new world, the Internet, with old enemies...

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