Instagram played a much larger role in Russia's efforts to interfere with the 2016 elections than Facebook initially let on. That's one of many striking findings of a bipartisan Senate investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 election.
The Short film ArchivesSenate Intelligence Committee released the second volume of its report on Russia's interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and the report makes clear that Instagram played a large role in the Russia-backed Internet Research Agency's "information warfare campaign."
"On the basis of engagement and audience following measures, the Instagram social media platform was the most effective tool used by the IRA to conduct its information operations campaign," the report notes.
This is striking in part because Facebook has long downplayed Instagram's role in Russia's election interference. The company previously told Congress that, according to its estimates, only 20 million people say IRA posts on Instagram (Facebook's general counsel told Congress the IRA reached 126 million on Facebook proper.)
"Instagram was the most effective tool used by the IRA"
But the Senate report makes clear that the IRA's real influence on Instagram was much higher. The top two most popular IRA Instagram accounts alone generated more than 46 million interactions, according to the report. "In total, over the course of more than two years spent as an instrument for foreign influence operations, 12 of the IRA's Instagram accounts amassed over 100,000 followers, and nearly half of the IRA's 133 Instagram accounts each had more than 10,000 followers," the report says.
In a statement, a Facebook spokesperson acknowledged that its previous assessment of IRA activity on Instagram was "somewhat incomplete," but suggested that some Instagram users who interacted with the accounts in question also interacted with IRA content on Facebook.
"As we said previously, our data regarding the number of Instagram users who were reached by IRA content is somewhat incomplete, but based on the data available, we assess that 20 million unique Americans saw an IRA post on Instagram that didn't see one on Facebook," the spokesperson said.
The Senate report is not the first time questions have been raised about the IRA's use of Instagram. Researcher Jonathan Albright previously found that Instagram was a much bigger source of Russia-backed disinformation than Facebook had previously claimed.
"Facebook’s sibling property has largely been left as an afterthought," Albright wrote in 2017, referring to Instagram. "Instagram is a major distributor and re-distributor of IRA propaganda that’s at the very least on par with Twitter. In my opinion, the platform is far more impactful than Twitter for content-based 'meme' engagement — especially for certain minority segments of the American population." (Facebook subsequently shut off Albright's ability to access data he used in his initial research.)
But the Senate Intelligence Committee's report proves that Albright and others were right to push for more information about the IRA's use of Instagram, which we now know was far more widespread than previously claimed.
Topics Facebook Instagram Social Media
Sinkhole opens up outside MarNew macOS update is here to make your MacBook's battery healthierTaylor Swift fans suspect her brother is singing on mysterious new trackAll the stuff Trump could sell to fix the budgetChrissy Teigen feels the wrath of the internet after proclaiming her fondness for Ed SheeranLittle girl eating mac and cheese has absolutely no time for Snow WhiteWorld's fastest internet connection: Researchers say they hit 44.2 TbpsPinterest is making food porn work for youDonald Trump has touched The Orb. Here's what that meansWhy Trump is threatening to 'close' social media platformsMelania Trump has no time for Donald's need for handChelsea Handler looks deep into an orb and sees a brighter future if Melania dumps TrumpNew 'Avatar 2' set photo shows off some highEverything coming to HBO Max in June 2020Katy Perry's 'SNL' performance was upstaged by a backpackCampaigner Ruth Hunt on straightwashing and erasure of LGBTQ historyShep Smith shuts down former Trump advisor for politicizing the Manchester attackWalt Disney World parks plan to reThese coronavirus trackers can help you sort through the info overloadPinterest is making food porn work for you NYT's The Mini crossword answers for May 17 Why Alaska's bear cam bears are already getting so fat Get the 40 All your 'Bridgerton' Season 3 crushes, ranked Hungry wolf shows up on the fat bear cams and scarfs dozens of fish 'Back to Black' review: Amy Winehouse remembered in insulting biopic Can you FaceTime on Android? Stellantis NYT's The Mini crossword answers for May 16 Wow, even Don Jr. opposes the mine in fat bear country 'GTA 6' 2025 release date window confirmed by Rockstar Games Watch the SpaceX craft carrying NASA astronauts dock with the ISS Apple's super A big shark and a large squid fought in the deep sea SK Hynix to upgrade Wuxi plant in China · TechNode Two MIT students charged for exploiting Ethereum blockchain bug, stole $25 million in crypto Apple adds setting to help phone TSMC to mass produce 2nm chips for Apple in 2025: report · TechNode Best smartphone deal: Get the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra for $200 off at Amazon. How to unmatch on Tinder
2.3549s , 8222.8671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Short film Archives】,Steady Information Network