NEW: FB Marketplace has 1 billion users and is one of the company’s most promising sources of $$. But growth comes at a cost: our investigation reveals how FB fails to protect buyers and sellers from scam listings, fake accounts & violent crime. Thread... propublica.org/article/facebo…
Internal documents, interviews with Marketplace workers, and law enforcement records show how the product has become a favorite of cybercriminals who come from around the world to find victims. There’s a staggering array of scams being perpetrated on Marketplace:
Facebook says Marketplace “lets you see what real people in your own community are selling,” and that viewing a profile is a great way to see who you’re dealing with. But workers say hacked and fake accounts are a huge issue, and are used by fraudsters to rip off people at scale
Scams and crime are always a reality on peer-to-peer sales sites. But FB’s scale, existing safety issues, and approach to securing its platform create a unique opportunity for bad actors. The company says it heavily invests in systems and people to protect Marketplace.
Marketplace's flaws reflect Facebook's approach to overseeing its platform. It rapidly scales new products to a user base of ~3 billion, and then relies on automated systems, low-paid contractors and a smaller number of full-time FB employees to enforce its rules.
We found a network of fake & suspicious accounts posting thousands of Spanish-language listings for penis enlargement/ED. These obviously bogus profiles flooded Marketplace with listings featuring hypersexalized images for oral supplements that violated multiple FB policies.
After clicking on a few of the posts, they began appearing in my Marketpalce recommendations. Facebook eventually removed thousands of the listings and took other action against more than 100 accounts after we informed the company of the activity.
Workers said used car scams are also pervasive on Marketplace. We identified thousands of bogus listings for used cars with minimal effort. Scammers hack into profiles and use them to post dozens of listings for the same vehicle targeted at different parts of the US.
Once again, scam vehicle listings posted by hacked accounts started showing up in my recommendations. I was often served a mix of truck scams, ED posts, and other listings that violated FB’s rules.
Marketplace contract workers said they rarely, if ever, stop someone from getting ripped off. And until recently, they had largely unfettered access to Facebook Messenger inboxes. This resulted in people spying on romantic partners and other privacy violations, workers said.
Facebook said Marketplace workers no longer have access to Messenger inboxes. Instead, workers can access Marketplace messages during an investigation. FB said it has a zero-tolerance policy for ppl who break its rules. (Workers confirmed people have been fired for snooping.)
Internal documents show Marketplace workers have to be familiar with a dizzying array of global scams being perpetrated on the service. Multiple countries have been labeled “high risk” due to the prevalence of scams originating from them. Benin is one such country.
Documents said scammers based there use fake and hacked accounts to run listings for scam loans and male enhancement products. Yet in spite of the “unusually high scam prevalence” in Benin, Facebook officially launched Marketplace there last month.
We looked at cases where police say criminals used Marketplace to lure victims for armed robbery/murder. One involved Joshua Gorgone of Penn. Police say he stabbed a woman to death when she came to his apartment to buy a fridge he’d listed on Marketplace. He pled not guilty.
On Facebook, Gorgone went by the user name Thraxx Mula and had a gun in his profile’s background image. Months after being charged with murder, his profile was still online with four Marketplace listings. FB removed it after being contacted by us. The company declined to comment.
There’s *lots* more in the story, including a look at people fencing stolen goods on Marketplace, and some of the measures taken by eBay and Craigslist to rein in scams which Facebook has yet to adopt. Reporting by me, @ACInvestigates + @peterelkind: propublica.org/article/facebo…
Coda: As a result of reporting this story, my Marketplace recommendations are still garbage and now I’m being shown Cialis and Viagra ads nonstop on Facebook...

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More from @CraigSilverman

14 Sep
The WSJ's revelation of internal reports that showed the harm of Facebook's VIP profile program and the negative effect of Instagram on teens reveal a core truth about FB: people inside the company document and articulate the problems but they really struggle to affect change
What we can read of these reports shows the quality of work done internally to try and quantify harm and issues. Yes, insiders are the only ones with access to data to do this work. But ppl at FB take these challenges on because they care and want to see the company do better
@RMac18 and I saw this time and again last year in internal threads and reports. Lots of ppl at FB want to fix this stuff. So they put in the work to make the case internally. The problem is they end up hitting a wall when fixes conflict with growth/revenue/public image
Read 8 tweets
22 Apr
Exclusive: An internal report reveals how Facebook failed to prevent the "Stop the Steal" movement from using the platform to "spread conspiracy, and help incite the Capitol insurrection.” This new evidence contradicts public statements from Zuck/Sandberg: buzzfeednews.com/article/craigs…
The report shows FB didn't know the "Stop the Steal" movement was building for months before Nov 3. On election day it exploded in a viral FB group that “normalized delegitimization and hate in a way that resulted in offline harm and harm to the norms underpinning democracy.”
The report (“Stop the Steal and Patriot Party: The Growth And Mitigation Of An Adversarial Harmful Movement”) provides yet another case study of how relatively small but coordinated groups of people can wreak havoc and spread misinformation on the world’s dominant social network.
Read 7 tweets
6 Mar
BREAKING: David Brooks has resigned from his position at the Aspen Institute following our reporting — and new revelations — about conflicts of interest between the star NYT columnist and funders of a program he led for the think tank: buzzfeednews.com/article/craigs…
Something new we discovered: On March 15 of last year Brooks appeared on Meet The Press and said: "I think people should get on Nextdoor, this sort of ‘Facebook for neighbors.’”

Left unsaid: Nextdoor, a social network for neighborhoods, had donated $25,000 to Weave, his project.
A day before his appearance on the nationally televised NBC program, Brooks also tweeted to his nearly 250,000 followers, “If you know someone who lives alone, ask them to join NextDoor.”
Read 10 tweets
6 Mar
NEW: On @pbsnewshour David Brooks addressed our reporting about Weave, its funding & lack of disclosure. He made at least two false statements incl. claiming Facebook funding was publicly disclosed. It wasn’t until we reported it. I’ll explain, you watch:
@pbsnewshour When asked about him taking funding from FB he says: "Yeah first we totally did disclose it because everything is public.”

False. Aspen’s 2018 funding report for Weave does not include FB: aspeninstitute.org/transparency/

He never mentioned FB funding in any columns or publicly.
The Facebook funding of Weave was made public in our report about Brooks writing a blog post for FB's corporate website. He never disclosed, nor did Aspen. Our first story revealing FB funding for Weave: buzzfeednews.com/article/craigs…
Read 9 tweets
3 Mar
NEW: NYT columnist David Brooks draws a second salary for leading an Aspen Institute project funded by Facebook, Jeff Bezos' dad, & others. He didn't disclose this to readers. The Times refused to say if the paper was aware of Brooks' second salary: buzzfeednews.com/article/craigs…
Facebook gave $250,000 in 2018 to help fund Weave, Brooks' project at the Institute. A few months later Brooks began promoting Weave in the Times. He never disclosed the FB money, his salary, or other funders. Weave received just over 1.5 million in 2018, the latest $$ available.
Along with columns about Weave, Brooks published Times columns that mention Facebook, its founder Mark Zuckerberg, and the company’s products without disclosing his financial ties to the social networking giant.
Read 6 tweets
24 Feb
Totally shocked by this, and thrilled for the @BuzzFeedNews team. huge thanks to @RMac18 for being an amazing reporting parter and to @JohnPaczkowski @mat and eveyone who worked on these stories with us.
@BuzzFeedNews @RMac18 @JohnPaczkowski @mat you can tell how shocked I am by the many typos in my tweet
@BuzzFeedNews @RMac18 @JohnPaczkowski @mat Also! It’s very cool to win a Polk the same year as fellow Canadian @HelenBranswell, whose pandemic reporting has been incredible.
Read 4 tweets

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