Our teams work to find and stop various forms of deceptive behavior on our platform. While our work against Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior (CIB) is our most well-known effort, we routinely take action against inauthentic behavior (IB) that doesn't rise to the level of CIB. Today, we're beginning to share notable examples of recent enforcement actions against these IB violations to paint a more complete picture of the broad range of adversarial behaviors, trends and tactics we see. By sharing our findings, we hope to advance the public's understanding of this evolving space, including the gray areas where the line between acceptable and deceptive behaviors isn't as clear cut.

Unlike CIB, which is typically designed to mislead people about who is behind an operation in order to manipulate public debate for a strategic goal, IB is primarily centered around amplifying and increasing the distribution of content and is often financially motivated. This isn't new - people have been trying to use inauthentic techniques to make money since long before the internet. Recently, we've seen malicious actors around the world use US political and social issues to drive people to off-platform domains filled with ads or selling merchandise. We've also seen them use similar tactics to leverage prominent topics in other regions around the world. At first glance, these can be mistaken for politically motivated influence operations, when in fact they come from malicious actors who simply use political themes as a form of spam or clickbait lures. Today's report shares examples we've found in recent months of this behavior and how we handled them.

Because some of the content shared by IB actors isn't itself violating, we take action based on the deceptive behavior we see on our platform. In this report, we share a range of enforcement levers we use - from warnings to reducing the distribution of content to removing IB actors from our platform. The report also describes how our policies have evolved over time to stay ahead of changing deceptive behaviors. We expect these tactics to continue to adapt, and so will we.

See the detailed Inauthentic Behavior Report for more information.

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Facebook Inc. published this content on 21 October 2020 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 21 October 2020 19:04:06 UTC