Meta

Report March 2026

Submitted
Executive summary

We are pleased to share our seventh report under the 2022 Code of Conduct on Disinformation, which also draws from our work with the Code’s Taskforce. In accordance with the subscription form submitted by Meta Platforms Ireland Limited (Meta) in January 2025, this report is being submitted by Meta in respect of the Facebook, Messenger, and Instagram services and on behalf of WhatsApp Ireland Limited in respect of the WhatsApp messaging service. 

The aim of this report is to provide an update on how Meta approached misinformation and disinformation in the European Union (the EU) and, where relevant,  Norway, Liechtenstein and Iceland (together, the EEA) between July and December 2025. We have additionally included any pertinent updates which occurred after the reporting period, where relevant in the report. Highlights include: 

  • Elections: The National Elections chapter provides an overview of our work on elections within the EEA, detailing our core policies, processes, and implementation strategies. It outlines our comprehensive approach to those elections, which continued for elections held in the second half of 2025. The election responses covered in this report include Norway, Czech Republic, Ireland and the Netherlands elections.

  • Expanding GenAI Transparency for Meta’s Ads Products: We began gradually rolling out “AI Info” labels on ad creative videos using a risk-based framework. When a video is created or significantly edited with our generative AI creative features in our advertiser marketing tools, a label will appear in the three-dot menu or next to the “Sponsored” label. We will continue to evolve our approach to labeling AI-generated content in partnership with experts, advertisers, policy stakeholders and industry partners as people’s expectations and the technology change.

  • Media literacy: Meta published its first Media Literacy Annual Plan on 21 July 2025, which set out its current approach to media literacy in the EU and the products and features we make available to users of Facebook and Instagram. It also provided details on specific media literacy initiatives run by Meta, including its work on digital citizenship, its media literacy lessons in Get Digital, We Think Digital and Soy Digital, and its election literacy programs.

  • Coordinated Inauthentic Behaviour trends: We are sharing insights into a covert influence operation that we disrupted in Poland and Belarus in the second half of 2025. We detected and removed these campaigns before they were able to build authentic audiences on our apps.

Here are a few of the figures which can be found throughout the report:

  • From 01/07/2025 to 31/12/2025, we removed over 11,000,000  ads from Facebook and Instagram, of which over 6,000,000  ads were removed from Facebook and Instagram for violating our misinformation policy.

  • From 01/07/2025 to 31/12/2025, we labelled over 810,000 ads on both Facebook and Instagram with “paid for by” disclaimers.

  • We removed 1 network for violating our Coordinated Inauthentic Behaviour (CIB) policy which targeted one or more countries in the EEA (effectively or potentially). We also took steps to remove fake accounts, prioritising the removal of fake accounts that seek to cause harm. In Q3 2025, we took action against 692M fake accounts and in Q4 2025, we took action against 1.1B fake accounts on Facebook globally. We estimate that fake accounts represented approximately 4% of our worldwide daily active people (DAP) on Facebook during Q3 2025 and 5% during Q4 2025.

This report addresses the practices implemented for Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp within the EEA during the reporting period of H2 2025. In alignment with Meta's public announcements on 7 January 2025, we continue to evaluate the applicability of these practices to Meta products. We also regularly review the appropriateness of making adjustments in response to changes in our practices, such as the deployment of Community Notes.

Commitment 38
The Signatories commit to dedicate adequate financial and human resources and put in place appropriate internal processes to ensure the implementation of their commitments under the Code.
We signed up to the following measures of this commitment
Measure 38.1
In line with this commitment, did you deploy new implementation measures (e.g. changes to your terms of service, new tools, new policies, etc)?
No
If yes, list these implementation measures here
N/A
Do you plan to put further implementation measures in place in the next 6 months to substantially improve the maturity of the implementation of this commitment?
No
If yes, which further implementation measures do you plan to put in place in the next 6 months?
As mentioned in our baseline report, our policies benefit from our experience and expertise. 
Measure 38.1
Relevant Signatories will outline the teams and internal processes they have in place, per service, to comply with the Code in order to achieve full coverage across the Member States and the languages of the EU.
Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger
QRE 38.1.1
Relevant Signatories will outline the teams and internal processes they have in place, per service, to comply with the Code in order to achieve full coverage across the Member States and the languages of the EU.
We invest in combating the spread of harmful content, including misinformation and disinformation, in support of our implementation of the Code.
Teams with expertise in content moderation, operations, policy design, safety, market specialists, data and forensic analysis, stakeholder and partner engagement, threat investigation, cybersecurity and product development all work on these challenges. These teams are distributed globally, and draw from the local expertise of their team members and local partners.