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Facebook, Twitter may face backlash over removal of China accounts related to Hong Kong protests

South China Morning Post
發布於 2019年08月20日16:08 • Sarah Dai sarah.dai@scmp.com
  • Analysts say ad revenue the two platforms earn in the world’s second-largest economy could now be at risk
Facebook removed seven pages, three groups and five accounts involved in what it described as “coordinated inauthentic behaviour as part of a small network that originated in China and focused on Hong Kong”. Photo: AP

Facebook and Twitter's decision to take down accounts allegedly backed by the Chinese government to spread disinformation on Hong Kong protests may mean they face repercussions in the country even though the two social media platforms are already blocked by the Great Firewall, said analysts.

Analysts said advertising revenue the two platforms earn in the world's second-largest economy could now be at risk as Chinese companies looking to expand overseas reassess the situation.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

"Although marketing campaigns on Facebook and Twitter primarily target an overseas audience, Chinese companies that buy ads on the two may have to reconsider whether the national interest is now at stake," said Liu Guohong, a director at Shenzhen-based think tank China Development Institute. "As such, the account suspensions may have some adverse impact on revenue the two earn in China."

Facebook on Monday removed seven pages, three groups and five accounts involved in what it described as "coordinated inauthentic behaviour as part of a small network that originated in China and focused on Hong Kong".

On the same day, Twitter said it had suspended 936 accounts originating from within China for a number of violations of the company's "platform manipulation policies", including spam, coordinated activity, fake accounts and ban evasion.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

Facebook's revenue in 2018 from China-based advertisers was estimated to account for about 10 per cent of total sales, or US$5 billion, according to a note from Pivotal Research Group. Despite the lack of an official revenue breakdown ex-US, Facebook has cited China as one of its top five overseas markets, which together accounted for 57 per cent of total revenue in 2018.

Facebook takes down anti-protest accounts 'due to Beijing links, not content'

Globally, Facebook is the second largest digital advertising platform after Google, with a market share of 20.2 per cent. According to eMarketer, US adult Facebook users spend an average of 38 minutes per day on the platform, which expects monthly users to grow 6 per cent year-on-year to 1.76 billion this year.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

"We generate meaningful revenue from a limited number of resellers representing advertisers based in China," noted Facebook alongside risk analysis in an annual report filed in January.

The company has an office in Shenzhen that operates as a 'corporate embassy' with the help of its local partner Meet Social, according to a report by The New York Times.

Facebook said on Tuesday it had decided to take down accounts related to the Hong Kong protests over a controversial extradition bill because they were associated with the Chinese government, rather than over the content they posted.

A spokesman for the company said Facebook had used a mix of technology and investigative work to determine that the accounts were associated with the Chinese government, and were using deceptive tactics " including fake accounts to disseminate content " in a coordinated effort.

China's ByteDance poaches Facebook veteran to help drive TikTok's overseas business

Facebook declined to comment on financial matters related to China. Twitter did not immediately respond to an emailed inquiry made outside US office hours.

"Chinese authorities will most likely use the incident to highlight US hypocrisy (over internet censorship) and appeal for sympathetic support across the global community," said Liu.

On Tuesday, there were many social media posts by China's netizens pointing out how the blocking action by the two social media giants was no different to the kind of censorship the US government has criticised China for.

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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