Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Facebook, Twitter swipe Trump ‘misinforma­tion’

- LIU JIE/XINHUA

SAN FRANCISCO, United States (AFP) — Facebook and Twitter took aim at US President Donald Trump and his campaign on Wednesday, 5 August, over a video post in which he contended that children are “almost immune” to the coronaviru­s, a claim they said amounted to “misinforma­tion.”

In an extraordin­ary move, Facebook removed the clip from the president’s account — the first time it has taken down one of his posts for violating its content rules.

The video — an excerpt from a interview — “includes false claims that a group of people is immune from COVID-19 which is a violation of our policies around harmful COVID misinforma­tion,” a Facebook spokesman told AFP.

Twitter meanwhile said it had blocked Trump’s official campaign account over a tweet containing the same video, in which Trump made the case for reopening US schools come September.

A spokesman for the San Francisco-based service told AFP the tweet was “in violation of the Twitter rules on COVID-19 misinforma­tion,” adding that the campaign would have to remove it before being allowed to tweet again.

Soon thereafter, the @TeamTrump account was active, suggesting the contested video had been taken down.

“Another day, another display of Silicon Valley’s flagrant bias against this president, where the rules are only enforced in one direction,” the Trump campaign’s deputy national press secretary Courtney Parella said in a statement.

“The president was stating a fact that children are less susceptibl­e to the coronaviru­s,” she said. “Social media companies are not the arbiters of truth.”

 ??  ?? THE US Department of Commerce in Washington D.C., said that the overall US trade deficit narrowed in June as exports rose faster than imports.
THE US Department of Commerce in Washington D.C., said that the overall US trade deficit narrowed in June as exports rose faster than imports.

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