Facebook bans accounts tied to Indonesian fake news group

The groups and accounts were shut down “based on their behavior, not the content they were posting."
  • Indonesia is battling its own wave of online hate speech, as conservative groups exploit social media to spread lies and target minorities
  • Some 800 Saracen-linked accounts, 207 pages, 546 groups and 208 Instagram accounts linked to the group have been banned

JAKARTA: Facebook has shut down hundreds of accounts and pages linked to an Indonesian group accused of spreading hate speech and fake news, the company said Friday.
The world’s biggest social network said cyber group Saracen engaged in “coordinated abuse of the platform” by operating a network of hoax accounts that mislead online readers about who was behind them.
“The people behind this activity coordinated with one another and used fake accounts to misrepresent themselves, and that was the basis for our action,” Facebook’s head of cybersecurity policy Nathaniel Gleicher said in a statement.
Saracen gained infamy in Indonesia two years ago when police accused it of deliberately spreading untruths via social media.
At least one of its members was jailed following a wide-ranging investigation.
Indonesia is battling its own wave of online hate speech, as conservative groups exploit social media to spread lies and target minorities.
Authorities are worried inflammatory material posted online could crack open social and religious fault lines in the world’s largest Muslim-majority country ahead of presidential elections in April.
Some 800 Saracen-linked accounts, 207 pages, 546 groups and 208 Instagram accounts linked to the group have been yanked from the network, Gleicher said.
About 170,000 people followed at least one of the pages, and more than 65,000 followed at least one of the Instagram accounts.
The groups and accounts were shut down “based on their behavior, not the content they were posting,” Gleicher said.
Facebook has moved to stamp out efforts by state actors and others to manipulate the social network using fraudulent accounts.
The US firm began looking into these kinds of activities after revelations of Russian influence campaigns during the 2016 US election, aimed at sowing discord.
“We are constantly working to detect and stop this type of activity because we don’t want our services to be used to manipulate people,” Gleicher said.
Facebook has a fact-checking partnership with AFP in multiple countries.