The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New Zealand privacy tsar accuses Facebook of failing to cooperate

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s privacy regulator yesterday accused Facebook of failing to cooperate on tackling livestream­ing in the wake of the Christchur­ch mosques massacre, saying founder Mark Zuckerberg was ‘disingenuo­us’ about its systems.

The gunman livestream­ed his rampage at two mosques on March 15 on Facebook, with the footage proliferat­ing widely online despite the platform saying it ‘quickly’ removed the footage.

Privacy Commission­er John Edwards said Zuckerberg was ‘disingenuo­us’ in saying bad actors were going out of their way to circumvent Facebook’s systems.

“They actually didn’t have any systems to detect the events in Christchur­ch,” Edwards to Radio New Zealand, adding that a delay on livestream­ing would be a good interim measure.

“It is a technology that is capable of causing great harm ... He (Zuckerberg) can’t actually tell us, or won’t tell us, how many suicides are livestream­ed, how many murders, how many sexual assaults.

“In fact I’ve asked Facebook exactly that last week and they simply don’t have those figures or won’t give them to us.” Zuckerberg said last week that a delay on live feeds was not on the cards despite pressure on the US firm to crack down on the sharing of violent video or images.

Edwards added that the social network needed to step up and be responsibl­e for the content that the site hosts.

“This is a global problem. The events that were livestream­ed in Christchur­ch could happen anywhere in the world,” he added.

“They have been responsibl­e for appalling content that set the preconditi­ons for genocide in Myanmar.

“They have enabled their service to be manipulate­d by Russian trolls to influence the outcome of elections.” Australia last week passed controvers­ial laws that could see social media executives from firms such as Facebook or YouTube face jail for failing to take down violent extremist content quickly.

Measures that Facebook says it is considerin­g after the Christchur­ch attacks, which claimed the lives of 50 people, include barring people who have previously violated its community standards from livestream­ing. — AFP

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