Russia Is Learning How to Bypass Facebook's Disinfo Defenses

Russia Is Learning How to Bypass Facebook's Disinfo Defenses

Since Russia’s stunning influence operations during the 2016 United States presidential race, state and federal officials, researchers, and tech companies have been on high alert for a repeat performance. With the 2020 election now just seven months away, though, newly surfaced social media posts indicate that Russia’s Internet Research Agency is adapting its methods to circumvent those defenses.


In September, University of Wisconsin researcher Young Mie Kim started analyzing posts on Facebook and Instagram from 32 accounts connected to the IRA. Within weeks, Facebook announced page, group, and account takedowns related to Iranian and Russian disinformation efforts in October. And accompanying research from the social media analysis firm Graphika corroborated that 31 of the 32 accounts Kim had been observing were Russia-linked. But Kim's findings, detailed for the first time today, reveal additional details about how the IRA has evolved its tactics—and how it may be continuing to do so.


“Despite the increased transparency measures by top platforms it looks like the Russians are taking advantage of loopholes to try and circumvent the tech platforms’ defenses,” Kim told WIRED. “They’ve improved their mimicry behaviors and because of their evolving tactics it’s increasingly more difficult to detect these foreign actors. So I think we should be very wary of that.”

Ahead of the 2016 election, the IRA built up pages with massive followings that often invented personas or grassroots organizations—complete with logos and other marketing material. As digital platforms began scanning for international indicators of what Facebook calls “coordinated inauthentic ..

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