{"id":1174066,"date":"2023-08-03T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2023-08-03T10:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/theintercept.com\/?p=440398"},"modified":"2023-08-03T10:00:00","modified_gmt":"2023-08-03T10:00:00","slug":"a-pro-putin-facebook-network-is-pumping-french-language-propaganda-into-africa-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2023\/08\/03\/a-pro-putin-facebook-network-is-pumping-french-language-propaganda-into-africa-2\/","title":{"rendered":"A Pro-Putin Facebook Network Is Pumping French-Language Propaganda Into Africa"},"content":{"rendered":"

As Russia strengthens<\/span> ties with governments across French-speaking parts of West and Central Africa, social media users in the region have faced a well-documented barrage of pro-Moscow influence campaigns: a swarm of videos, images, and news stories depicting Russia in a positive light \u2014 typically at the expense of France, the region\u2019s former colonial power.<\/p>\n

A report shared with The Intercept shines a light on one such campaign in action \u2014 and it appears to be reaching an especially large audience.<\/p>\n

According to an Intercept review of investigations<\/a> conducted by the tech watchdog group Reset<\/a>, a network of 53 Facebook pages has been amplifying French-language videos promoting the Kremlin\u2019s line on the war in Ukraine, starting in March. According to Reset, the pages share the common traits of \u201ccoordinated inauthentic behavior,\u201d a term<\/a> used by Meta, Facebook\u2019s parent company, to describe when pages misrepresent themselves and work together in pursuit of specific political or financial goals. (Reset receives funding from Luminate, which was founded by Pierre and Pam Omidyar. The Intercept was founded by Pierre Omidyar and continues to receive funding from First Look Institute, which is supported by the Omidyar Group.)<\/p>\n

Together, the accounts have a combined 4.3 million followers, more than that of similar high-profile networks in Africa such as \u201cRussosph\u00e8re<\/a>,\u201d a web of Francophone pages operating across social media platforms that was exposed earlier this year, as well as scores of pro-Russia pages shut down by Facebook in 2019<\/a> and 2020<\/a>.<\/p>\n

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The report also comes amid warnings from employees that Meta\u2019s plans to cut 10,000 jobs this year may hamper its ability to detect harmful false information spread unintentionally (misinformation) or intentionally (disinformation) on its platforms. In April<\/a>, the company laid off \u201cthe majority\u201d of its 50-person engineering team focused on misinformation. In May<\/a>, a separate round of cuts hit business and tech divisions covering content moderation, while in July<\/a>, it was reported that Meta quietly slashed jobs from teams investigating election disinformation and coordinated troll campaigns, heightening concerns around upcoming 2024 elections across the globe.<\/p>\n

In addition to the job cuts, Meta critics have long claimed<\/a> the company does not devote enough resources to monitoring content<\/a> published in languages other than English, such as in sub-Saharan Africa \u2014 in other words, pages misrepresenting their identities to achieve common goals are more likely to go undetected. <\/p>\n

\u201cAfrican countries are not at all considered priority zones for geopolitical reasons, for resource-related reasons, but also because of the difficulties that can exist with [language barriers],\u201d said Asma Mhalla, a French researcher specializing in tech and digital regulation<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Debates over content moderation are inherently complex<\/a> \u2014 and particularly in the United States<\/a>, with its deep attachment to freedom of speech<\/a>. But advocates calling on Meta<\/a> to beef up self-regulation<\/a> point to the platform\u2019s massive global reach<\/a>, its role in public debate, and the consequences of allowing troll campaigns to act freely \u2014 with calls to take violence<\/a> against certain groups and efforts to share false medical advice presenting fatal risks.<\/p>\n

A Meta spokesperson said the company is committed to monitoring content in Africa and pointed to the company\u2019s record of breaking up foreign influence campaigns in languages other than English, including in French-speaking Africa. Earlier this year<\/a>, the firm shut down a group of accounts in Burkina Faso with 65,000 followers.<\/p>\n

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