Facebook has banned Q non conspiracy theories accounts on all platforms


US President Donald Trump's supporter wears a Q-shirt after participating in a convoy circuit in Ederville, Georgia on September 5, 2020.Image copyright pyrite
Reuters

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QN influencers have a large audience on social media

Facebook has banned all accounts linked to the Quan Conspiracy Theory movement from its platform.

“From today, we will remove Facebook pages, groups and Instagram accounts,” the company said Tuesday.

The move is a significant step forward for Facebook’s earlier decision to share and promote groups and accounts and to remove or ban groups and accounts.

Quennon is a conspiracy theory that says President Trump is waging a war against elite devil-worshiping pedophiles.

In a statement released Tuesday, Facebook said its staff had begun deleting content and deleting groups and pages, but that “this work will take time and will continue in the coming days and weeks.”

The statement added that “our dangerous organizations rations operations team will continue to enforce this policy and search for content to remove rather than rely on user reports.”

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Facebook said it was updating the measures implemented in August, aimed at “disrupting Quennon’s ability” to operate – and operate – through its network.

That policy – introduced to limit public safety threats posed by Quinnon, “offline flying anarchist groups” and US-based military organizations – resulted in the banning of more than 1,950 Facebook groups and more than 10,000 Instagram accounts.


This is a big step for Facebook, which has decided how it plans to actively remove all evolving Quenon content from its platforms.

I then asked Nick Clegg, Facebook’s vice president of global affairs, why the site still allows Quinn to spread political ambiguity among U.S. voters and to use hashtags such as #SaveOverChildon.

The first crackdown on this dangerous conspiracy theory of Facebook is centered by those who support violent content, removing many groups and pages.

But Quennon supporters, parent groups, local forums and the average Instagram feed were immediately adapted to using the new payable hashtags. And the movement continued to grow.

This latest move will be welcomed – but it will also be very difficult to implement, especially since the quinoa has grown so large and spread in new teachings.

I recently visited the U.S. Talked to voters about how QN disinformation about candidates and child trafficking rings could affect their friends and neighbors before polling day.

He explained that people he knew now believed the completely false claims he had seen on Instagram and Facebook about Democrats running a child-trafficking ring or that presidential candidate Bn Biden abusing children.

Could this move – like the last one – be too late?


Facebook is not the only social media to counter the QN conspiracy movement.

In July, Twitter banned thousands of accounts and said it would stop recommending content linked to QN non in an effort to help prevent “offline flight losses”. He also said that he would block the URL associated with the group from being shared on the platform.

What is Quenon?

October In October 2017, an anonymous user posted a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed in as “Q” and claimed that the U.S. A level of security clearance is known as “Q clearance”.

These messages became known as “Q drops” or “in breadcrumbs”, often written in secret language, with slogans, promises and pro-Trump themes.

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Traffic on mainstream social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has been booming since 2017, and there are signs that numbers have increased during the coronavirus epidemic.

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Opinions through social media, there are thousands of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories presented by Quennon.

Quenn moved on from the “Pizzagate” saga in 2016 – the bogus theory of running a pedophile ring outside a Washington pizza restaurant about Democratic Party politicians.