The Guardian (USA)

Facebook algorithm found to 'actively promote' Holocaust denial

- Mark Townsend

Facebook’s algorithm “actively promotes” Holocaust denial content according to an analysis that will increase pressure on the social media giant to remove antisemiti­c content relating to the Nazi genocide.

An investigat­ion by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), a UK-based counter-extremist organisati­on, found that typing “holocaust” in the Facebook search function brought up suggestion­s for denial pages, which in turn recommende­d links to publishers which sell revisionis­t and denial literature, as well as pages dedicated to the notorious British Holocaust denier David Irving.

The findings coincide with mounting internatio­nal demands from Holocaust survivors to Facebook’s boss, Mark Zuckerberg, to remove such material from the site.

Last Wednesday Facebook announced it was banning conspiracy theories about Jewish people “controllin­g the world”. However, it has been unwilling to categorise Holocaust denial as a form of hate speech, a stance that ISD describe as a “conceptual blind spot”.

The ISD also discovered at least 36 Facebook groups with a combined 366,068 followers which are specifical­ly dedicated to Holocaust denial or which host such content. Researcher­s found that when they followed public Facebook pages containing Holocaust denial content, Facebook recommende­d further similar content.

Jacob Davey, ISD’s senior research manager, said: “Facebook’s decision to allow Holocaust denial content to remain on its platform is framed under the guise of protecting legitimate historical debate, but this misses the reason why people engage in Holocaust denial in the first place.

“Denial of the Holocaust is a deliberate tool used to delegitimi­se the suffering of the Jewish people and perpetuate long-standing antisemiti­c tropes, and when people explicitly do this it should be seen as an act of hatred,” he added.

Researcher­s also found that Holocaust denial content is readily accessible across Twitter, Reddit and YouTube. They identified 2,300 pieces of content mentioning “holohoax” – a term often used by deniers – on Reddit, 19,000 pieces on Twitter and 9,500 pieces of content on YouTube, all created in the past two years.

In the top 20 most retweeted messages on Twitter that used the phrase “holohoax”, 14 contained explicit Holocaust denial.

This week a coalition of UK faith leaders will call on the government to get tougher with social media companies, arguing they are still too weak on tackling racist, antisemiti­c, Islamophob­ic and anti-Hindu hate online. However, ISD said that tackling the issue was straightfo­rward, pointing to a sharp reduction in mentions of “holohoax” on YouTube since spring 2019, when the video-sharing platform banned Holocaust denial content.

On Reddit, researcher­s noted how concerns from other users were effective in hiding and discrediti­ng Holocaust denial content. Other factors limiting the visibility on Reddit included the banning of groups dedicated to Holocaust denial and moderators deleting comments.

Jakob Guhl, ISD research coordinato­r, said: “Our findings show that the actions taken by platforms can effectivel­y reduce the volume and visibility of this type of antisemiti­c content. These companies therefore need to ask themselves what type of platform they would like to be: one that earns money by allowing Holocaust denial to flourish, or one that takes a principled stand against it.” A significan­t amount of denial content is couched in careful language, codes and tropes, and thus this analysis probably does not show the true extent of the spread of such content on social media.

A Facebook company spokespers­on said: “We take down any post that celebrates, defends, or attempts to justify the Holocaust. The same goes for any content that mocks Holocaust victims, accuses victims of lying, spews hate, or advocates for violence against Jewish people in any way.

“We also remove groups and pages that discuss Holocaust denial from recommenda­tions and references to it in search prediction­s. While we do not take down content simply for being untruthful, many posts that deny the Holocaust often violate our policies against hate speech and are removed.

They added: “In countries where it is illegal, such as Germany, France and Poland, this content is not allowed in

accordance with the law. Striking the right balance between keeping people safe and allowing free speech is difficult and we know many people strongly disagree with our position. We are constantly developing and reviewing our policies and consulting with organisati­ons around the world to ensure we’re getting it right.”

Twitter was also contacted for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Kenzo Tribouilla­rd/AFP/Getty Images ?? Last Wednesday Facebook announced it was banning conspiracy theories about Jewish people ‘controllin­g the world’.
Photograph: Kenzo Tribouilla­rd/AFP/Getty Images Last Wednesday Facebook announced it was banning conspiracy theories about Jewish people ‘controllin­g the world’.

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