In a report published yesterday, Meta says the campaign was running for over a decade. After the first exposure in August, the Pentagon mandated an audit into how the military conducts false information warfare. Meta’s Q3 Adversarial Threat Report shows more evidence of the U.S. military playing a major role in the operation. The goal was to target users in Central Asia and the Middle East with pro-US information. This operation was first uncovered in August by the Stanford Internet Observatory and social media firm Graphika. That initial report called the scheme “the most extensive case of covert pro-Western [information operations] on social media to be reviewed and analyzed by open-source researchers to date.” Meta says that the account holders were purposely hiding their identification and locations: “Although the people behind this operation attempted to conceal their identities and coordination, our investigation found links to individuals associated with the U.S. military,” Meta wrote in its latest Quarterly Adversarial Threat Report.
Targets
During the operation, posts on Facebook and Instagram would focus on cluster areas, such as Iran, the Middle East, or North Africa. These clusters would post on specific positive themes, such as sports and culture in the United States. They would also highlight how cooperating with the US was helping the nation, while also criticizing countries like Russia, China, and Iran. While the operation was in place for over a decade, it does not seem to have been a success: “The majority of this operation’s posts had little to no engagement from authentic communities,” Meta noted. Tip of the day: File History is a Windows back up feature that saves each version of files in the Documents, Pictures, Videos, Desktop, and Offline OneDrive folders. Though its name implies a primary focus on version control, you can actually use it as a fully-fledged backup tool for your important documents.