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Facebook still bristles with fake news

If you search for “Breitbart” on Facebook, one of the listings likely to pop up is a group featuring the news organization’s red logo, with more than 20,000 members. When you click to join, you’re asked to answer three questions, including whether you consider the government your enemy. But the group has no affiliation with the Breitbart news organization, and if an administrator lets you in, you’ll see a news feed consisting of mainstream news, conservative commentary and outright fabrications. The sketchiest posts link to fringe websites few have ever heard of.

Facebook is under the most intense scrutiny in its 17-year history, amid revelations that it ran political ads paid for by Russian interests during last year’s presidential election. Congressional committees plan to release those ads in coming weeks. Meanwhile, special counsel Robert Mueller is investigating the social media giant as part of his inquiry into Russian meddling in American politics. Facebook executives will soon testify before Congress, which may impose new regulations on social-media platforms that have largely evaded government intervention up till now.

But Facebook faces another pernicious problem that has earned less attention of late: Fake news pockmarks the platform, especially in membership groups where people go to find like-minded users. Much of the bogus information has a political slant, as the Russian ads that ran on the platform last year apparently did. But much of the phony info may serve a more banal purpose than influencing elections — simply making money by coaxing gullible users into clicking on outrageous-sounding posts that lead them to third-party sites clogged with cheesy ads for things such as “Hot Girls Fishing” and “Better Than Adderall.”

This post in an unverified Breitbart group on Facebook promotes bogus conspiracy theories about the Oct. 1 mass shooting in Las Vegas.
This post in an unverified Breitbart group on Facebook promotes bogus conspiracy theories about the Oct. 1 mass shooting in Las Vegas.

Is this garden-variety snake oil or Russian subterfuge? Hard to say. “The line between politically motivated disinformation and inflammatory content meant to drive clicks to websites is a blurry one,” says Tim Chambers, who runs the digital arm of the consultancy Dewey Square Group and authored a recent paper on the malicious use of social media. “Fake sites are often based out of Eastern Europe and interrelate with state-sponsored actions.”

I spent several days exploring fake news on Facebook using my personal account, and it wasn’t hard to find. When I searched for “Breitbart,” for instance, I found four different Facebook accounts using the name. But only one bore the check mark indicating Facebook has verified it’s legitimate.

I asked to join one of the unverified Breitbart groups and was granted access by a Facebook user dubbed Joel Busick, who has 0 Facebook friends and lists no personal information, except the claim that he’s from Sister Lakes, Mich. His profile picture is a jar of red fruit. These are all hallmarks of a fake account, according to cybersecurity experts.