Facebook is latest platform to crack down on fringe conspiracy group QAnon
The new limitations come only after the movement has metastasized.
Facebook became the latest social media platform to crack down on the fringe far-right conspiracy group known as QAnon on Wednesday afternoon.
"We’ve removed over 790 groups, 100 Pages and 1,500 ads tied to QAnon from Facebook, blocked over 300 hashtags across Facebook and Instagram, and additionally imposed restrictions on over 1,950 Groups and 440 Pages on Facebook and over 10,000 accounts on Instagram," Facebook said in a press release.
While restricted entities could still face removal, Facebook said the new policy actions will curtail the group's reach in news feed, algorithm recommendations and more.
The social media platform said the move is part of an expansion of its "Dangerous Individuals and Organizations policy" to cover "organizations and movements that have demonstrated significant risks to public safety but do not meet the rigorous criteria to be designated as a dangerous organization."
The expansion means Facebook will impose restrictions on those using "veiled language and symbols particular to the movement" to advocate violence. The expansion appears to target QAnon, whose members routinely speak in codes, riddles and obtuse imagery.
QAnon supporters tout the false theory that Democrats and celebrities are running a global pedophilia ring, and that President Donald Trump is about to mass arrest the perpetrators. The movement is amorphous, incorporating everything from the Robert Mueller investigation to the coronavirus pandemic into its sweeping and baseless worldview.
While springing initially from 4Chan, supporters of the movement have been involved in multiple instances of offline violence, including an alleged murder in Staten Island last year. The FBI has said that QAnon a potential domestic terror threat.
Facebook's crackdown on QAnon follows similar moves by Twitter and TikTok earlier in the summer -- actions that significantly lag behind Reddit's deplatforming of the group in 2018.
These recent moves to limit QAnon's spread come only after the movement has metastasized, with two Republican candidates tied to QAnon possibly headed to Congress next year.
Facebook's policy change also applies to groups related to Antifa, a far-left political movement targeted by the Trump administration, despite scant evidence backing the administration's claims of the group's role in recent social unrest.