Facebook on Wednesday said it has started
weeding out bogus accounts by watching for suspicious behavior such as
repetitive posts or torrents of messages.
The security
improvement was described as being part of a broader effort to rid the
leading social network of hoaxes, misinformation, and fake news by
making sure people are who they claim to be.
"We've
found that when people represent themselves on Facebook the same way
they do in real life, they act responsibly," Shabnam Shaik of the
Facebook protect and care team said in a blog post.
"Fake accounts don't follow this pattern, and are closely related to the creation and spread of spam."
Accounts
suspected of being bogus are suspended and holders asked to verify
identifies, which scammers typically don't do, according to the
California-based social network.
In France, the new
tactic has already resulted in Facebook taking action against 30,000
accounts believed to be fakes, Shaik said.
"We've made
improvements to recognize these inauthentic accounts more easily by
identifying patterns of activity -- without assessing the content
itself," Shaik said.
"With these changes, we expect we
will also reduce the spread of material generated through inauthentic
activity, including spam, misinformation, or other deceptive content
that is often shared by creators of fake accounts."
Under
pressure to stymie the spread of fake news, Facebook has taken a series
of steps including making it easier to report such posts and harder to
make money from them.
Facebook also modified its
displays of trending topics to find stories faster, capture a broader
range of news, and help ensure that trends reflect real world events
being covered by multiple news outlets.
Facebook chief
Mark Zuckerberg has sought to deflect criticism that the huge social
network may have been used to fuel the spread of misinformation that
affected the 2016 US presidential race.
Facebook last
week unleashed a new weapon in the war against "revenge porn" at the
social network as well as the messaging services Messenger and
Instagram.
When intimate images shared on Facebook
without permission are reported, confirmed and removed, the company will
use photo-matching technology to prevent copies from being shared again
on its platform.
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