Albuquerque Journal

Facebook admits response inadequate in Myanmar

Nonprofit investigat­ed use of platform to incite violence, spread hate

- BY BARBARA ORTUTAY

NEW YORK — Facebook is admitting that it didn’t do enough to prevent its services from being used to incite violence and spread hate in Myanmar.

The company “can and should do more” to protect human rights and ensure it isn’t used to foment division and spread offline violence in the country, Alex Warofka, a product policy manager, said in a blog post.

Facebook commission­ed the nonprofit Business for Social Responsibi­lity to study the company’s role in Myanmar and released the group’s 62-page report late Monday.

It has come under heavy criticism for permitting itself to be used to inflame ethnic and religious conflict in the country, particular­ly against minority Rohingya Muslims. The report confirms this and offers recommenda­tions, including preparing for “massive chaos and manipulati­on” in the country’s 2020 parliament­ary elections.

“Facebook has become a means for those seeking to spread hate and cause harm, and posts have been linked to offline violence,” the report says. “A minority of users is seeking to use Facebook as a platform to undermine democracy and incite offline violence, including serious crimes under internatio­nal law.”

The Myanmar report comes as Facebook and other social media companies face a trove of problems in dealing with people, groups and nations intent on using their services for malicious reasons, whether that’s inciting violence, spreading hate messages, propaganda and misinforma­tion or meddling with elections around the world.

Facebook is focused on rooting out misinforma­tion in the U.S., but it’s also dealing with people using its platforms to incite violence in Sri Lanka, India and elsewhere. Late Monday, Facebook said it shut down 30 Facebook accounts and 85 Instagram accounts for suspected “coordinate­d inauthenti­c behavior” linked to foreign groups that sought to interfere in Tuesday’s U.S. midterm elections.

The report said hate and harassment is leading to selfcensor­ship among “vulnerable groups such as political activists, human rights defenders, women, and minorities.”

The report does acknowledg­e that Facebook has made progress, but adds that there is “more to do.” In August, the company banned Myanmar’s military chief and 19 other individual­s and organizati­ons from its service.

Facebook doesn’t have any employees permanentl­y based in Myanmar, but makes “regular trips” there with a range of employees. The company says that having employees there could pose risks to them and increase the Myanmar government’s ability to request data on users.

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