I'd be happy to respond.
I'll zoom out a bit about how we handle state media entities at Meta, and then when those state media entities start to bleed into covert influence activity, like what you saw with Tenet.
For several years now at Meta, we've labelled state-controlled media entities from 10 different countries. On Russian state-controlled media specifically, we put in place additional measures that restricted Russian state-controlled media after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Those measures included things like not just labelling their pages on our platform, but also putting in what we call “interstitial friction”. If someone tries to click on a link, for example, to a Rossiya Segodnya story, they actually get a pop-up window that says, “Hey, are you sure you want to visit that? That's Russian state-controlled media.”
We also labelled posts by any user—