USA TODAY International Edition

I’m fighting to remove social media video of the killing of my daughter

Facebook, Google, others profiting from it

- Andy Parker Andy Parker is author of “For Alison: The Murder of a Young Journalist and a Father’s Fight for Gun Safety.”

On Oct. 12, with assistance from Georgetown University’s Civil Rights Clinic, I filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission against Facebook for its failure to abide by its own terms of service and remove videos of my daughter’s murder. That same evening, I appeared on Erin Burnett’s program on CNN.

During my interview, Erin produced a note from Facebook stating they had removed all the videos my team had flagged. She read that statement onair to me and millions of viewers. But as I have come to experience with my prolonged battle with Facebook, their statement wasn’t worth the paper it was written on. Wash, rinse, repeat – it’s the same tactic they’ve been using since it all began for me after Alison, a television reporter, was fatally shot while doing her job in 2015.

Facebook whistleblo­wers

The response usually goes something like this: “We at Facebook ( or YouTube, depending on the day) are so sorry for your unimaginab­le loss. Violence has no place on our platform. We take this very seriously. These videos have been removed.” And here we are, this time weeks later, with the videos Facebook claimed on national television that they removed, still up and easily found.

Having lived through this cycle for six years now, I’m not surprised. Frances Haugen and another recent whistleblo­wer confirmed what I’ve maintained all along – that Facebook has the ability to remove violent content, misinforma­tion and harassment, but they won’t because this content is profitable. Alison’s murder can be monetized and highly shared for traffic, and so they do it because they can.

What can be done? I had my turn testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee two years ago to rebut the claims of innocence coming from endless parades of Facebook and Google executives. Obviously, that goodwill did not result in any meaningful action other than spawn more hearings with Mark Zuckerberg parroting the same disingenuo­us talking points.

Last year, Georgetown Law and I filed a similar FTC complaint against YouTube and its parent company Google because Alison’s murder video is still all over that platform as well. Since then, despite numerous updates and examples of videos still circulatin­g on YouTube, we’ve heard nothing but crickets from the FTC.

Thanks to immunity from any liability provided by Section 230, Facebook and Google can get away with anything except copyright violation.

In an effort to exploit that small opening, we’ve asked Gray Television, the owner of the video, to grant a cocopyrigh­t so we can use the “Al Capone” strategy – if we can’t bring Facebook to justice for their most egregious practices, at least we could hold them accountabl­e in some measure.

Gray has refused.

My testimony, the FTC filings and our attempts to obtain copyright are the equivalent of throwing spaghetti on the wall, hoping something sticks. The FTC could emerge from the shadows and fine Facebook and Google. The Federal Trade Commission has levied multimilli­on dollar fines, but for companies worth billions that’s little more than chump change.

However, the firestorm of accusation­s against Facebook has increased pressure on Congress to finally act and amend Section 230. That will require something a dysfunctio­nal Congress may be hard- pressed to accomplish.

Get rid of liability immunity

Alison’s murder being shared on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube is just one of the egregious practices underminin­g the fabric of our society. Haugen confirmed that Facebook could use artificial intelligen­ce to stop this shameful practice, but instead their algorithms are not designed to make using Facebook as helpful or as wholesome as possible. They are designed to keep users hooked.

To me, the fix is easy.

Do away with the liability immunity Section 230 provides. If Facebook and YouTube find themselves looking at thousands of legitimate lawsuits, they’ll stop the action that made my FTC complaints necessary.

Congress, do your job. Do it for all those who have been harmed. Do it to save our country. Do it for Alison.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Andy Parker and his daughter, Alison, a news reporter who was fatally shot during a live TV broadcast near Roanoke, Va., in 2015.
FAMILY PHOTO Andy Parker and his daughter, Alison, a news reporter who was fatally shot during a live TV broadcast near Roanoke, Va., in 2015.

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