Between January and May this year, public complaints and monitoring by the communications ministry flagged more than 15,000 fake accounts using the names of 26 royal family members, the report said, citing Fahmi. More than 230,000 pieces of content across various social media platforms were requested to be taken down, with more than 90% of those involving online gambling and scams, he said.
Fahmi said he has reprimanded Meta, and added he regards “legal action as the last option, but we are already close to that last option,” Bernama reported.
Malaysia has a unique constitutional monarchy where nine hereditary Malay rulers take turns to serve five-year terms. The majority of the accounts are on Facebook, while others are on Instagram and TikTok.
Action can be taken under the Online Safety Act, Fahmi was quoted as saying. Provisions under the act include fines of up to 1 million ringgit ($260,000) for failing to comply with a take-down order, daily fines of 100,000 ringgit for continuing offenses, and other penalties that can reach 10 million ringgit.
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