Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

How tech manages online speech

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Apple, Google and Facebook this week erased from their services many — but not all — videos, podcasts and posts from right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his Infowars site. Twitter left Jones’ posts untouched.

The differing approaches to Jones exposed how unevenly tech companies enforce their rules on hate speech and offensive content. There are only a few cases in which the companies appear to consistent­ly apply their policies, such as their ban on child pornograph­y and instances in which the law required them to remove content, like Nazi imagery in Germany.

When left to make their own decisions, the tech companies often struggle with their roles as the arbiters of speech and leave false informatio­n, upset users and confusing decisions in their wake. Here is a look at what the companies, which control the world’s most popular public forums, allow and ban.

Facebook at the center of the storm

Of all the tech companies, Facebook has faced the biggest public outcry over what it allows on its platform.

Whenever the social media company has been pressed to explain its decision-making, it has referred to its community standards, a public document that outlines Facebook’s rules for users. The company has outright bans against violent content, nudity and terrorist recruitmen­t propaganda. The rules on other types of content, including hate speech and false news, are more ambiguous.

When asked about Infowars last month, Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, said he wouldn’t remove pages hosting popular conspiracy theories of the type Jones is known for sharing. Zuckerberg then turned the conversati­on to the subject of the Holocaust, defending Facebook users who deny the Holocaust occurred.

His awkward explanatio­n prompted outrage, and less than a day later, Zuckerberg offered a public apology.

Now, less than a month later, Facebook has banned Jones and removed four pages belonging to him — including one with nearly 1.7 million followers — for violating its policies. The ban means that while Jones still has an account and can view content on Facebook, he is suspended from posting anything to the platform, including to his personal page or any pages on which he is an administra­tor.

In a post, Facebook said it banned Jones and his pages for “accumulati­ng too many strikes.”

— Sheera Frenkel

Google’s wide gray area

Of all the major online services, Google’s YouTube is probably the most explicit about what is and is not allowed. But even with its published “Community Guidelines,” YouTube has wrestled with the subjective interpreta­tion of those rules.

Users can flag videos that they believe violate those guidelines, which include bans on videos with nudity or sexual content or incite violence. YouTube will then review those flagged videos for potential violations. In addition, YouTube’s computer systems also comb the site for videos that violate its rules.

But many videos operate in a gray area. Even in YouTube’s own explanatio­n of “hateful content,” the company calls it is a “delicate balancing act” between free expression and protecting YouTube users.

Jones incurred two content violations from YouTube over the last year. In February, YouTube said he had violated its policies regarding harassment and bullying when a video claiming that David Hogg, one of the outspoken student survivors of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, was a “crisis actor.”

In Jones’ most recent violation, last month, YouTube took down four of his videos that included hate speech against Muslim and transgende­r people as well as footage of a child being shoved to the ground. YouTube said the videos had violated its policies pertaining to hate speech, harassment and child endangerme­nt.

— Daisuke Wakabayash­i

Twitter, the ‘free speech wing of the free speech party’

Twitter has been more permissive of controvers­ial content than its social media peers, with executives calling it “the free speech wing of the free speech party.” While Facebook removes nude or gory images, Twitter is more tolerant of adult and violent content. Rather than deleting these kinds of images, Twitter tends to hide them behind warnings that require users to click through before they can see the content.

Twitter’s approach has provoked plenty of criticism, particular­ly around its lax handling of harassment.

Celebritie­s like actress Leslie Jones have been temporaril­y driven off the platform by swarms of abusers.

Jack Dorsey, the company’s chief executive, has said that the company needed to do better at policing trolls. In December, Twitter said it would promote “healthy conversati­on” by using a combinatio­n of human moderation and machine learning to detect trolls and minimize the appearance of their posts on the platform.

Although the parents of several Sandy Hook shooting victims are suing Jones for defamation, a Twitter spokesman said that neither Jones’ personal account nor his Infowars account are currently in violation of Twitter’s policies. Tweets questionin­g the school shooting in Newtown, Connecticu­t, remain live on both accounts.

In a series of tweets late Tuesday, Dorsey suggested that other tech companies had caved to political pressure in their decision to remove Jones from their platforms and argued that journalist­s — not Twitter — were better suited to fact-checking Jones’ claims.

“He hasn’t violated our rules,” Dorsey wrote. “We’re going to hold Jones to the same standard we hold to every account, not taking one-off actions to make us feel good in the short term, and adding fuel to new conspiracy theories.” — Kate Conger

Apple: ‘I’ll know it when I see it’

Without a social-media platform, Apple typically avoids the content controvers­ies that ensnare its peers. Yet the iPhone maker still makes many decisions about what apps, podcasts, songs and videos it will make available on its popular services.

Apple on Sunday banned five of the six Infowars podcasts from its podcasts service. Apple determined the sixth podcast, RealNews with David Knight, did not violate its policies, which prohibit podcasts that “could be construed as racist, misogynist, or homophobic” or that depict “graphic sex, violence, gore, illegal drugs, or hate themes.” In the past, Apple has also removed neo-Nazi songs and the Nazi anthem from iTunes.

Apple reviews all apps that apply for its app store and determined that the Infowars app did not violate its rules. Apple posts extensive policies for apps that it distribute­s, including prohibitio­ns on “content that is offensive, insensitiv­e, upsetting, intended to disgust, or in exceptiona­lly poor taste.” The policies give a series of examples, including content that is defamatory, discrimina­tory, mean-spirited, overtly sexual, encourages violence or includes “realistic portrayals of people or animals being killed, maimed, tortured, or abused.”

How Apple decides which apps violate those policies is more vague, however. Apple said in its policy: “We will reject apps for any content or behavior that we believe is over the line. What line, you ask? Well, as a Supreme Court Justice once said, ‘I’ll know it when I see it.’ And we think that you will also know it when you cross it.” — Jack Nicas

 ?? ILANA PANICH-LINSMAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2017) ?? Alex Jones, the rightwing conspiracy theorist, prepares for his show Feb. 17, 2107, in Austin, Texas. Over the past several days Apple, Facebook, YouTube and Spotify have removed most of Jones’ programmin­g from their services.
ILANA PANICH-LINSMAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2017) Alex Jones, the rightwing conspiracy theorist, prepares for his show Feb. 17, 2107, in Austin, Texas. Over the past several days Apple, Facebook, YouTube and Spotify have removed most of Jones’ programmin­g from their services.

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