The Guardian (USA)

Facebook fails to stop Spanish language antiaborti­on disinforma­tion, study says

- Dani Anguiano in Los Angeles

Anti-abortion Facebook pages with millions of followers are spreading disinforma­tion about abortion to Spanish speakers with little to no interventi­on from the social media platform, according to a new report from Naral Pro-Choice America.

The abortion rights group examined nine Facebook pages that reach more than 2.79 million people for the firstof-its-kind report, part of its efforts to show how disinforma­tion is disseminat­ed by opponents of abortion. Researcher­s found that several of the pages “repeatedly spread medically inaccurate informatio­n about abortion without any action from Facebook”, highlighti­ng what experts have described as a crisis of Spanish-language misinforma­tion that’s slipping through the cracks.

The report comes as reproducti­ve rights are in peril in the US with the supreme court expected to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade ruling, which guaranteed the right to abortion in the US.

“It has never been more critical for people to have access to medically accurate informatio­n about abortion – no matter the language they speak. What’s clear here is that anti-choice extremists are capitalizi­ng on social media companies’ failure to moderate Spanish-language disinforma­tion,” Mini Timmaraju, the Naral Pro-Choice America president, said in a statement.

Research from the group found that articles in Spanish focused on US abortion policy that received the most engagement on social media “overwhelmi­ngly lean anti-choice” and come from outlets with religious affiliatio­ns.

Many of the Spanish-language Facebook pages examined by Naral researcher­s spread disinforma­tion about the safety of abortion, claiming that it leads to increased risk of breast cancer, anxiety, infertilit­y, depression and suicide. Some posts have been viewed thousands of times without interventi­on from Facebook.

The content spreads the same disinforma­tion about abortion as English-language anti-abortion groups, which also push medically inaccurate informatio­n about abortion and demonizes abortion providers, the report says.

Catholicis­m plays a key role in much of the Spanish-language content, which suggests that support for abortion care conflicts with religious identity. The Spanish-speaking anti-abortion movement relies on stereotype­s, said Gabriela Rico, the lead researcher for the report, such as that Latinx people widely oppose abortion and are all Catholic.

“This is not only a false, racist assumption, but a way for the antichoice movement to erase the majority of Latinx people who support reproducti­ve freedom – often because of, not in spite of, their faith,” Rico, a Naral research manger, said.

A recent Navigator Research poll found that 65% of Hispanic Americans support Congress passing a law to guarantee the right to an abortion in the US.

The spread of abortion disinforma­tion is part of Facebook’s broader failure to moderate Spanish-language content, experts say. A study last year found that only 30% of misinforma­tion in Spanish is flagged with warning labels, compared to 70% in English. Lawmakers have called on the company to do more to address what they deemed a “disinforma­tion crisis”. In a response to lawmakers, Facebook focused on the resources the company has put into limiting misinforma­tion, stating that it has “35,000 people working on these challenges”.

Facebook did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about Naral’s findings.

Multiple social media platforms have failed to stop disinforma­tion about abortion in Spanish and English, but Facebook’s moderation decisions have been “particular­ly problemati­c”, the report said.

The failure to remove abortion disinforma­tion has “direct implicatio­ns for the 72% of Latinx people in the United States who use its platform”, the report states.

“Latinx communitie­s are targeted with anti-choice disinforma­tion constantly – I have seen this not only in my work on this report, but in my own family and community,” Rico said. “Spanish-speaking people deserve to receive accurate informatio­n about reproducti­ve freedom, not to be lied to and used as pawns in a political game.”

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? The report comes as the US supreme court is expected to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade ruling.
Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters The report comes as the US supreme court is expected to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade ruling.

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