Instagram forced to follow the White House account users trolled

With the great shadow of election fraud, Joe Biden became the new president of the United States. However, the president, who was elected with a high number of votes, does not seem to have won much attention from the American public in the online community. To change this situation, the management of the online social platform Instagram seems to be taking action to help him.

The Gateway Pundit, a conservative news site, reported on Jan. 23 that a large number of Instagram users have recently found themselves inexplicably forced to follow new President Joe Biden’s “White House account” on the platform, and even after repeatedly unfollowing him, they still become “followers” of the account later.

Many Instagram users have posted complaints that even though they repeatedly unfollowed and even tried to block the account, they would find themselves following the White House account again hours later.

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“Gateway experts” said that since Biden’s White House account page has less than 1 million followers, Instagram started to make it mandatory for its users to follow Biden in order to make the page not look so pathetic.

Amidst complaints from a large number of Internet users, Biden’s White House account on Instagram has now finally saved up to 6 million followers.

Instagram is a social platform application used on mobile by Facebook Inc. that allows netizens to post pictures they have captured at any Time and share them with other netizens. Many American Internet users are using this platform.

It is also worth mentioning that before Instagram forced users to follow Biden’s White House account, Facebook Inc. had deleted tens of thousands of accounts that posted information that made the management feel threatening.

Last week, on the eve of Joe Biden’s official inauguration, Facebook reportedly deleted the accounts of more than 78,000 users of its online social networking platforms Facebook and Instagram. Facebook claims that the deleted accounts posted content about the so-called “militarized social movement,” and that most of the users had posted sensitive “Anonymous Q” messages for more than six months, including posts that taught people “How to try to bypass our detection,” among other things.

As of Jan. 12, 2021, we have identified more than 890 militarized social movements and removed a total of approximately 3,400 pages, 19,500 groups, 120 events, 25,300 Facebook profiles and 7,500 Instagram accounts,” Facebook said in a Jan. 19 statement. “

The statement continued, “We also removed approximately 3,300 pages, 10,500 groups, 510 events, 18,300 Facebook profiles and 27,300 Instagram accounts because they violated our policy on QAnon.”

In total, about 78,000 Facebook and Instagram accounts were deleted from August 2020 through Jan. 12, 2021, a Facebook spokesperson told Fox Business News Channel at the time.

Other big U.S. tech companies, such as the administrators of Twitter and Google‘s YouTube, have also deleted tens of thousands of accounts in recent weeks that they determined were “in violation.