Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Keep Trump off Facebook

- By Timothy L. O’Brien Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Donald Trump remains banned from Facebook’s global echo chamber, and that’s a good thing. After the social media company banned him in January for inciting a deadly insurrecti­on at the Capitol, its Oversight Board — the outside group the company establishe­d to monitor controvers­ial content and arbitrate thorny issues such as Trump’s exile — said Wednesday that his history of encouragin­g violence disqualifi­ed him for the time being.

“The Board found that, in maintainin­g an unfounded narrative of electoral fraud and persistent calls to action, Mr. Trump created an environmen­t where a serious risk of violence was possible,” a summary of the decision noted. The board also took Facebook to task, saying “it was not appropriat­e for Facebook to impose the indetermin­ate and standardle­ss penalty of indefinite suspension.” It pointed out that Facebook typically penalizes rule-breakers by removing content, imposing suspension­s with a clear time frame or permanentl­y disabling an account. It called on the company to remedy confusing guidelines for how its rules are applied against any of its users, with special, but not exclusive, care given to how influentia­l political leaders are treated.

The board told Facebook it had six months to “reexamine the arbitrary penalty it imposed” on Trump and craft a new one commensura­te with “the gravity of the violation and the prospect of future harm.” I hope when the time comes, Trump’s ban becomes permanent. If we’ve learned anything about the former president, it’s that he isn’t just your average political speaker. He’s a ringleader. And he’s unhinged and manipulati­ve enough to use platforms such as Facebook to do serious harm.

Had Trump been reinstated, his Facebook feed would most likely have featured familiar menu items: self-regard, pitches for money and his business, darts aimed at critics, disinforma­tion, and appeals to bigotry, racism and other bile. He would have also occasional­ly encouraged his most dedicated followers to rise up and demand what’s theirs.

Trump loyalists and free-speech purists will certainly savage the board’s ruling.

The loyalists, who are still playing down the events of Jan. 6 while embracing Trump’s big lie that the 2020 election was stolen, are the easiest to dismiss. Suppressin­g Trump, they argue, is evidence of their favorite myth — so-called cancel culture. Facebook has it out for them. In the real world, far-right outlets that engage in the heaviest flame-throwing, such as the Daily Wire and Fox News, continue to enjoy the greatest engagement on Facebook.

There’s more nuance and philosophi­c trapdoors on the free-speech side of the ledger. Our laws protect vigorous reporting and intense scrutiny of public figures while limiting, for example, protection for certain obscenitie­s and for “fighting words.” And by fighting words, the courts have meant the kind that instill or incite hatred or violence. Has any public figure of the modern era in the U.S. deployed fighting words to such disastrous effect as Trump? Free speech is a contingent right, and Trump’s desire to incentiviz­e his gladiators doesn’t outrank democracy, tolerance, personal and public safety.

The Oversight Board’s ruling is consistent with how the courts weigh rights to speech against calls to violence. If the board had given Trump a second chance, it also would have been a reminder of how poorly Facebook has policed its ubiquitous platform and how much the board appears to be a well-meaning and lushly funded fig leaf.

Trump’s proclivity for violence didn’t suddenly emerge on Jan. 6. He reveled in promoting violence during rallies as a presidenti­al candidate in 2016, and violence followed. He refused to initially condemn white nationalis­t violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, in 2017; blamed the media after one of his supporters sent pipe bombs to prominent Democrats and news organizati­ons in 2018; and suggested shooting undocument­ed migrants at the U.S. border in 2019. Last year, amid the COVID-19 outbreak, he encouraged protesters to march against state government­s mandating lockdowns; armed protesters followed suit in Lansing, Michigan. He and his campaign encouraged his “army” to take to the streets before the November election last year.

Facebook and its founder, Mark Zuckerberg, equivocate­d about all of this. It wasn’t until Trump told his supporters to “fight like hell” on Jan. 6, and they went on to break into the U.S. Capitol, that Facebook took action and barred him. And then it deferred to its Oversight Board.

But the board’s mandate is narrow.

It has operationa­l independen­ce and a generous budget of its own, but it can rule only on whether a small portion of the tsunami of content produced on Facebook violates the company’s standards.

That might be a step in the right direction if Facebook only published content. But the company runs a machine that encourages intense engagement among its users, and its algorithms then help that content take flight. An outside body that only monitors a fragment of problemati­c cases but isn’t empowered to examine and challenge how Facebook circulates and amplifies vitriol that helps foster sprawling communitie­s of conspiracy theorists or disseminat­e disinforma­tion is merely a placeholde­r — and not, as Facebook would have it, a countervai­ling force.

I imagine that Zuckerberg would never have allowed the Oversight Board to exist if it had been constitute­d to be more effective. Because Facebook’s business model — the one it sells so profitably to advertiser­s — is built on engagement, it has shied away from pulling the plug on some of its most engaging content. An internal study it commission­ed reported in 2018 that Facebook exacerbate­d tribalism and division among its users — behaviors that boost engagement. Facebook buried the study.

Zuckerberg has said he keeps Facebook’s spigot open in the interest of free speech and shared ideas. It may also be because letting everyone uncork is a good business. And Zuckerberg and his team have been willing to ignore abuses of the site for so long that there’s been little reason to believe that the impact of Trump’s presence there has been — or ever will be — fully vetted or understood outside of the company.

The board’s ruling offers hope that a more forensic examinatio­n may be possible. That’s important, because even if Trump goes away, there will be others who will try to fill his shoes on Facebook — and it’s still not clear we can expect the company or its board to uproot them.

 ?? JEROME ADAMSTEIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ??
JEROME ADAMSTEIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES

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