By Deborah Nnamdi
Meta has launched a sweeping crackdown on content fraud across Facebook, taking action against nearly half a million accounts in the first half of 2025 for inauthentic behavior, including spam and fake engagement.
The tech giant, which owns Facebook and Instagram, revealed that it removed approximately 500,000 accounts for “spammy behavior” and another 10 million fake profiles that were impersonating popular content creators. The enforcement measures ranged from limiting visibility and monetization options to outright removal from the platform.
“Creators should be celebrated for their unique voices and perspectives, not drowned out by copycats and impersonators,” Meta said in a statement accompanying the announcement.
The effort is part of Meta’s broader initiative to prioritize original content and support legitimate creators in an increasingly crowded digital space. The company is now rolling out stricter rules targeting accounts that recycle or repurpose others’ content without permission or meaningful changes.
Accounts found sharing unoriginal content—defined as repeated reposts of videos, photos, or text made by others—face reduced distribution and will be barred from monetizing their posts. Meta warned that lazy edits, such as simply stitching clips together or adding watermarks, won’t qualify as original content.
To support authentic creators, Meta is also testing new tools that identify and link duplicate videos back to the original post, helping surface rightful content owners and ensure proper attribution.
In addition, the company released a set of best practices to help creators expand their reach and maintain monetization eligibility. Creators are encouraged to prioritize original content to maximize distribution potential and share authentic, compelling stories that resonate with audiences. They should avoid simple edits or overused effects, exclude visible watermarks from other platforms, and use relevant captions while steering clear of excessive hashtags or formatting gimmicks.
Meta also introduced enhanced tools within its Professional Dashboard, allowing creators to view post-level insights and diagnose visibility or performance issues. A new “Support” section will alert users if their content is at risk of recommendation or monetization penalties.
This latest crackdown underscores Meta’s continued efforts to clean up the Facebook ecosystem, minimize digital noise, and ensure that high-quality, original content is rewarded. The move comes at a time when social platforms face mounting pressure to combat the flood of duplicate and AI-generated posts.
Rollout of the new policies and tools will continue gradually over the coming months.















