The Palm Beach Post

Facebook says it will remove posts that may lead to violence

- By Hamza Shaban

Facebook will start removing misleading and inflammato­ry posts that may trigger violent attacks, as the social network faces criticism over its response to sectarian conflict in countries such as Myanmar and Sri Lanka.

Facebook said that a new policy will cover misinforma­tion shared on the platform to instigate or amplify violence. The policy applies to written posts and manipulate­d images.

Civil society groups and threat-intelligen­ce agencies are among the partners that Facebook said will help the company flag incendiary posts and review their potential impact.

Facebook said that its local and internatio­nal partners must verify if the informatio­n they share is false, and show that the material could contribute to imminent violence. Once the threat is confirmed, Facebook said it will remove the content and take down similar posts.

The announceme­nt came as chief executive Mark Zuckerberg tried to clarify recent remarks, in which he said that people who deny the holocaust may do so in good faith, according to an interview with Recode. Zuckerberg later said, “I personally find Holocaust denial deeply offensive, and I absolutely didn’t intend to defend the intent of people who deny that.”

In the interview with Recode, Zuckerberg said that Facebook sees a substantia­l difference between false informatio­n and the type of false informatio­n that can result in physical harm. While Facebook won’t ban Infowars, a prominent right-wing outlet known for spreading conspiracy theories, the social network will take down posts that may lead to violence, Zuckerberg said. He pointed to the nations of Myanmar and Sri Lanka, where social media may have contribute­d to deadly sectarian conflict, according to United Nations and government officials.

“Reducing the distributi­on of misinforma­tion — rather than removing it outright — strikes the right balance between free expression and a safe and authentic community,” Facebook said in a statement Wednesday. The company added that the policy change would allow it to take down posts that contribute to physical harm.

The new policy was first enacted last month in Sri Lanka, the company said. Facebook removed content that falsely claimed that Muslims were poisoning food given to Buddhists. Similar posts had recently contribute­d to violence in the country. Government officials there grew so concerned with the inflammato­ry posts that Sri Lanka temporaril­y banned Facebook earlier this year to stem sectarian violence.

Facebook said the policy change will roll out in the coming months.

 ?? ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG ?? Facebook’s chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said his company sees a difference between false informatio­n and informatio­n that can result in physical harm, and will only ban the latter.
ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG Facebook’s chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said his company sees a difference between false informatio­n and informatio­n that can result in physical harm, and will only ban the latter.

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