San Francisco Chronicle

Facebook hinders DIY mask efforts

- By Mike Isaac

As health workers on the front lines of the coronaviru­s pandemic plead for personal protective equipment, volunteer efforts to create handsewn masks and deliver them to medical profession­als have quickly sprung up across the internet.

But those efforts were hampered by Facebook’s automated content moderation systems over the past week, according to sewing organizers who have used the social network to coordinate donation campaigns.

Facebook’s automated moderator systems have banned organizers of handsewn masks for health care workers from posting, they said, putting them in “Facebook Jail.”

Facebook’s systems threatened to ban the organizers of handsewn masks from posting or commenting, they said, landing them in what is colloquial­ly known as “Facebook Jail.” They said it also threatened to delete the groups. The issue has affected doityourse­lf maskmakers in states like Pennsylvan­ia, Illinois and California, they said.

Facebook has long struggled to distinguis­h between innocuous and malicious content on its site. While the Silicon Valley giant has relied on automated systems to flag and remove posts

that violate its terms of service, those systems can have trouble spotting nuance and can sometimes be overly aggressive or make mistakes in identifyin­g what may need to be taken down.

In recent weeks, Facebook has worked to clamp down on potentiall­y harmful coronaviru­s content. It has created teams to deal with the issue and has banned certain types of posts specifical­ly related to the virus.

At the top of its list were ads for masks, hand sanitizer and others looking to profit from the sale of safety equipment. Facebook banned advertisin­g for such equipment last month, and has taken down nearly all posts related to the sale of masks across its Craigslist­like section, called Marketplac­e.

But as the company ramped up efforts to crack down on scammers and other miscreants, volunteer coordinato­rs may have been caught in the crossfire.

“The automated systems we set up to prevent the sale of medical masks needed by health workers have inadverten­tly blocked some efforts to donate supplies,” Facebook said in a statement. “We apologize for this error and are working to update our systems to avoid mistakes like this going forward. We don’t want to put obstacles in the way of people doing a good thing.”

Those who were affected include Nicole Jochym, a student at Cooper Medical School of Rowan University in Camden, N.J. She recently put out a call on Facebook for people to use household materials to make their own versions of the masks to donate to medical workers.

Her volunteer organizati­on, Sew Face Masks Philadelph­ia, has grown to thousands of supporters since it became active in early March. More than 3,500 people have subscribed to her group’s

Facebook page alone.

“Our platform has become even more of a useful tool for our community members to engage with each other” said Jochym, 33.

But over the past few days, Jochym said Facebook’s systems flagged some of the posts from the community, marking them as breaking its guidelines against regulated goods and services.

Those whose posts were flagged or taken down were given a warning, and eventually threatened with being unable to post or comment on the site if other posts were flagged.

Muddled messaging from government agencies on whether people should be using face masks may have compounded the problem. Officials initially warned people not to buy personal protective gear like masks for fear that there would not be enough for health care workers. But last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advised people to start wearing masks in public.

Moderators said they believed the mixed messaging led to confusion at some of the big tech platforms, including Facebook.

“We support Facebook in their efforts in removing unethical sales” from their platform,” Jochym said. “But we are hoping that they can update their procedures to protect community organizati­ons such as ours.”

 ?? Elsa / Getty Images ??
Elsa / Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States