The Asian Age

FB a non-partisan platform, says India head amid political row

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New Delhi, Aug. 21: Facing allegation­s of bias in handling hate speeches, Facebook on Friday said it is an open, transparen­t and non-partisan platform, and will continue to remove content posted by public figures in India that are in violation of its community standards. The statement from Facebook (FB) India head Ajit Mohan comes against the backdrop of a political row following a Wall Street Journal report that alleged that the social media platform’s content policies favoured the ruling party in India.

“FB is and always has been an open, transparen­t and non-partisan platform where people can express themselves freely. Over the last few days, we have been accused of bias in the way we enforce our policies.

“We take allegation­s of bias incredibly seriously, and want to make it clear that we denounce hate and bigotry in any form,” Facebook India vice-president and managing director Ajit Mohan said in a blog post. He also emphasised that the company has an impartial approach to dealing with content and is strongly governed by its Community Standards.

Ajit Mohan

These standards outline what is and is not allowed on Facebook. Meanwhile, Facebook’s Oversight Board has said it will be within its scope to examine how the social media giant treats posts from public figures that may violate community standards and are the type of “highly challengin­g cases” that the board expects to consider once it starts functionin­g.

Asserting that FB’s commitment to India is unwavering, Mohan in the blog post said the company’s aim is to be an “ally” for India where its platforms preserve the “pluralisti­c character of a democracy by offering the freedom for people to express themselves and for entreprene­urs to build new things while also protecting society from broader harm”.

“Our Community Standards define what stays on our platform and are enforced globally... We enforce these policies globally without regard to anyone’s political position, party affiliatio­n or religious and cultural belief. We have removed and will continue to remove content posted by public figures in India when it violates our

Community Standards,” he said. In the wake of the WSJ report, the Parliament­ary Standing Committee on Informatio­n Technology has summoned Facebook on September 2 to discuss the issue of alleged misuse of the social media platform.

On Friday, Mr Mohan also said that many questions have been raised specifical­ly about enforcemen­t of FB policies around hate speech and pointed out that it has made “significan­t progress” in removing hate speech and other harmful content over the past few years.

◗ RECENTLY, A Wall Street Journal report alleged that FB’s content policies favoured the ruling party in India. Since then, the BJP and Congress have been trading barbs over social media giant’s alleged bias

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