• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Friday, May 16, 2025
Manhattan Tribune
  • Home
  • World
  • International
  • Wall Street
  • Business
  • Health
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • International
  • Wall Street
  • Business
  • Health
No Result
View All Result
Manhattan Tribune
No Result
View All Result
Home National

Meta bans Russian state media from its platforms for ‘interference’

manhattantribune.com by manhattantribune.com
18 September 2024
in National
0
Meta bans Russian state media from its platforms for ‘interference’
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


US-based Meta Group, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, announced on Monday that it was banning Russia’s main state media group from accessing its platforms worldwide, to prevent any “foreign interference activity”.

• Also read: RT: Russian state media outlet seen in the West as a propaganda tool

• Also read: Meta Dismantles Ineffective Russian Propaganda Operation

The ban comes after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday denounced the destabilizing activities of the Russian group Rossia Segodnia, to which RT belongs, which he said had become a veritable “branch” of Russian intelligence in the world.

“After careful consideration, we have expanded our action against Russian state media,” Meta said in response to an AFP query.

“Rossia Segodnia, RT and other related entities are now banned from our apps worldwide due to their foreign interference activities,” the American company said.

About ten days ago, the American authorities unveiled a battery of measures targeting the Russian media group in particular, including criminal prosecutions and sanctions, in response to attempts to interfere in the elections in the United States, which they attribute to Russia.

The State Department then imposed visa restrictions on Rossia Segodnia and its subsidiaries.

Destabilization campaigns

“These Kremlin-backed media outlets are not only playing a clandestine influence role to undermine democracy in the United States, but also to interfere in the sovereign affairs of countries around the world,” Blinken said Friday, citing destabilization campaigns in Moldova, Argentina, France, Germany and Africa.

In the United States, RT notably financed an online content creation company, based in Tennessee, which has published nearly 2,000 videos since the end of 2023, viewed more than 16 million times on YouTube, according to an indictment by the American prosecutor’s office published in early September.

“RT has conducted malicious influence campaigns in countries opposed to its policies, including the United States, with the aim of sowing domestic discord and thereby weakening opposition to the Russian government’s goals,” prosecutors say.

Russia has been the largest source of covert influence operations detected by Meta on its platform since 2017, with its campaigns escalating after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, according to the social media giant’s regular threat reports.

Russia’s state-run RT, launched in 2005, is seen by Westerners as a pure propaganda outlet for the Kremlin. Its website and television channels broadcast in several languages, including English, Spanish, French, German and Arabic.

Links to information

RT’s capabilities were expanded early last year, with new “cyber operational capabilities and ties to Russian intelligence services,” the U.S. State Department said in a recent statement. “This entity has focused primarily on influence and intelligence operations around the world,” the source said.

According to Washington, RT has also launched an online crowdfunding program in Russia “to provide military support and equipment… to Russian military units in Ukraine,” including from China.

The State Department said it was making diplomatic efforts to inform governments around the world about Russia’s use of RT to conduct covert activities and encourage them to take steps to limit “Russia’s ability to interfere in foreign elections and to obtain weapons for its war against Ukraine.”

Facebook and Instagram have been blocked in Russia since 2022, following a court ruling that labeled Meta an “extremist” as part of the Kremlin’s campaign against Western social media giants.

Tags: bansinterferencemediaMetaplatformsRussianstate
Previous Post

Second-generation Starlink satellites leak 30 times more radio interference, threatening astronomical observations

Next Post

A different qubit architecture could make it easier to manufacture the building blocks of a quantum computer

Next Post
A different qubit architecture could make it easier to manufacture the building blocks of a quantum computer

A different qubit architecture could make it easier to manufacture the building blocks of a quantum computer

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Category

  • Blog
  • Business
  • Health
  • International
  • National
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Wall Street
  • World
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact

© 2023 Manhattan Tribune -By Millennium Press

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • International
  • World
  • Business
  • Science
  • National
  • Sports

© 2023 Manhattan Tribune -By Millennium Press