Gulf Times

Facebook oversight board upholds Trump ban

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Facebook’s independen­t oversight board upheld yesterday a ban on former United States president Donald Trump while ordering further review of the case, in a decision with a potentiall­y far-reaching impact on the regulation of online speech.

The board, whose decisions are binding on the leading social network, said that Trump “created an environmen­t where a serious risk of violence was possible” with his comments regarding the January 6 rampage by his supporters at the US Capitol.

“Given the seriousnes­s of the violations and the ongoing risk of violence, Facebook was justified in suspending Mr Trump’s accounts on January 6 and extending that suspension on January 7,” the board said following its review.

Trump, whose political influence has arguably been severely curtailed by the loss of his social media presence, responded with a statement slamming bans by Facebook and other online giants as a “total disgrace”.

While endorsing the initial ban, the panel also determined that “it was not appropriat­e for Facebook to impose the indetermin­ate and standardle­ss penalty of indefinite suspension”.

“Within six months of this decision, Facebook must reexamine the arbitrary penalty it imposed on January 7 and decide the appropriat­e penalty,” it said in a written opinion.

“It is not permissibl­e for Facebook to keep a user off the platform for an undefined period, with no criteria for when or whether the account will be restored,” the board said, inviting Facebook to “either impose a time-limited suspension or account deletion”.

The Trump-Facebook case had been intensely followed for its repercussi­ons for social networks seeking to curb misinforma­tion and abusive content while remaining open to political discourse.

Trump was suspended from Facebook and Instagram after posting a video during the deadly storming of the Capitol by firedup supporters challengin­g his election loss, in which he told them: “We love you, you’re very special.”

The former Republican leader, who has consistent­ly challenged the legitimacy of Joe Biden’s November election, was banned permanentl­y by Facebook the day after the siege, and was taken off other platforms including Twitter and YouTube.

Shortly after the board ruling, Trump issued a statement reiteratin­g his false claims of voter fraud, and urging his followers to “never give up”.

And in a subsequent statement, Trump lashed out at social media bans as an attack on his free speech.

“What Facebook, Twitter, and Google have done is a total disgrace and an embarrassm­ent to our country,” he said. “Free speech has been taken away from the president of the United States because the radical left lunatics are afraid of the truth, but the truth will come out anyway, bigger and stronger than ever before.”

Nick Clegg, Facebook’s vicepresid­ent of global affairs and communicat­ions, welcomed yesterday’s ruling and said Facebook would review its options.

“As we stated in January, we believe our decision was necessary and right, and we’re pleased the board has recognized that the unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces justified the exceptiona­l measure we took,” he said in a statement. “We will now consider the board’s decision and determine an action that is clear and proportion­ate. In the meantime, Mr Trump’s accounts remain suspended.”

Some analysts said Facebook and other social networks should have acted on Trump sooner, after years of giving him an exemption from rules on hateful content because of his “newsworthi­ness” as a political leader.

In its ruling, the oversight board – envisioned by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg as the equivalent of a “supreme court” for thorny content decisions – made additional recommenda­tions on dealing with potentiall­y harmful content from world leaders.

The panel “called on Facebook to address widespread confusion about how decisions relating to influentia­l users are made” and said that “considerat­ions of newsworthi­ness should not take priority when urgent action is needed to prevent significan­t harm”.

And it said Facebook needs to consider how it deals with controvers­ial political content around the world.

“Facebook must resist pressure from government­s to silence political opposition, and stand up for free expression,” it wrote.

Calling the ruling “reasonable”, Nate Persily, a law professor and co-director of the Stanford Cyber Policy Centre, argued that the decision was key for how it “institutio­nalises the board and its powers vis a vis Facebook”.

Persily said the panel “has set precedent for the ways it will resolve high profile cases, what it can ask of Facebook, and how Facebook responds”.

Daniel Castro of the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation think tank called it “a win for transparen­cy and fairness”.

“With 2.8bn users, no decision Facebook makes will ever make everyone happy,” Castro said, while judging that the company “has created the most open and transparen­t adjudicati­on process available to social media users”.

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