Fake, international Facebook accounts behind the Convoy to Canberra protests

By  Cam Wilson 4 days ago  
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/fake-international-facebook-accounts-behind-the-convoy-to-canberra-protests/ar-AATFwuV
 © Provided by Crikey


Facebook accounts with fake pictures of non-existent people — based in 
countries such as India and Canada, or anonymously requesting donations — are 
helping run the Convoy to Canberra by creating Facebook groups for the protests.

Last week thousands of people from around Australia descended on Canberra in an 
anti-government, so-called freedom protest.

Taking inspiration from a similar protest in Ottawa, the protests are 
ostensibly about vaccine mandates but also feature a smorgasbord of 
anti-vaccine, conspiracy and fringe complaints.

Like many similar protests against COVID-19 public health restrictions during 
the pandemic, rally-goers answered influencers and groups using social media to 
call for action.

In the case of the Canberra convoy, platforms such as Facebook and Telegram 
have been used to advertise the protest and coordinate attendees, whereas 
crowdfunding platforms such as GoFundMe and GiveSendGo have been used trying to 
raise money.

The largest Facebook group for the protest that grew to have more than 177,000 
members was taken offline on Wednesday.

Former members claimed it had been deleted by Facebook. Meta, Facebook’s parent 
company, has been asked for comment.

Who’s behind the Facebook groups?

Meanwhile, thousands of attendees and supporters have begun to join several 
similarly named alternative groups set up both before and after the main group 
was removed.

However, there is evidence suggesting the accounts behind these new Convoy to 
Canberra Facebook groups may not be Australians — or even real people.

The one remaining alternative Facebook group for the protests has a single 
administrator: James Rhondes, of Ottawa, according to his Facebook account.

This account also posted in a now-removed Facebook group for the Canadian 
protests, Google search results show.

Searches using major search engines and social media platforms don’t show any 
other evidence of someone with that name living in Ottawa.

The Facebook account, which appears to have existed since at least March 2021, 
has almost no posts or engagement on those posts.

The account’s profile picture appears to be a photograph of a middle-aged 
Caucasian male.

But a number of distortions and digital artefacts suggest it’s an artificially 
generated image of a person who does not exist, according to Institute for 
Strategic Dialogue open source intelligence analyst Elise Thomas.

Irregularities on the profile picture of Facebook user James Rhondes, suggests 
it is artificially generated. Analysis by First Draft News also noted that the 
account’s Facebook ID doesn’t match the account name, suggesting it had been 
changed.

A Facebook account called Shamim Khan is the sole administrator of another 
Convoy to Canberra Facebook group. HIs account claims that he lives in 
Rajshahi, Bangladesh, features photographs of what appears to be a Bangladeshi 
man, and his posts are written in Bangla.

Khan has repeatedly posted Canadian convoy-related content into the Convoy to 
Canberra group, including promoting links to a faux-streaming site for the 
Ottawa protests that requires a user to supply credit card details to use.

Another small Canberra to Convoy Facebook group’s sole administrator is even 
more obvious about trying to get money.

The account behind it is called Freedom Convoy 2022 Truckers and has mostly 
posted content relating to the Canadian protests. In now deleted posts, it 
repeatedly sought donations for protesters by directing people to a broken link 
on a WordPress blog.

None of these accounts responded to messages.

What are the motives behind the accounts?

It’s not clear why these non-Australian and even fake accounts are creating 
online spaces to facilitate and promote the Convoy to Canberra protests. There 
are many reasons why a user may want to have power over a Facebook group with 
thousands of people reading its posts.

Earlier this week, Grid News reported that some of the largest Facebook groups 
for the Canada protests were run by a hacked Facebook account that was 
reportedly stolen from a real user.

A statement from Meta to American media outlets on Monday suggested that scams 
might be a motivating factor: “We continue to see scammers latch on to any 
hot-button issue that draws people’s attention, including the ongoing protests.”

It’s also not unheard of for international conspiracy or so-called freedom 
groups to seed events around the world by creating online spaces. Last year 
Guardian Australia reported on how a German conspiracy group helped create a 
series of anti-lockdown protests in Australia and abroad.

In this case, the groups appear to be largely filled with Australian protesters 
or supporters — there’s no suggestion they are completely inauthentic.

But for whatever reason, many seem by run by people who do not appear to be in 
Australia — or may not even exist.


The post “Fake, international Facebook accounts behind the Convoy to Canberra 
protests” appeared first on Crikey.

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