Explainer-Ahead of Trump Facebook ruling, here’s how social media sites
handle world leaders
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[May 04, 2021]
By Elizabeth Culliford
(Reuters) - Facebook's independent
oversight board on Wednesday will announce whether it is overturning the
company's suspension of former U.S. President Donald Trump's account.
The long-awaited ruling will bring the focus back onto how the world's
largest social network decides what world leaders and politicians can
and can't say on their platforms.
Here is how big tech companies deal with this thorny issue:
WHO GETS SPECIAL TREATMENT?
Facebook Inc and Twitter Inc currently have rules that give world
leaders, elected officials and political candidates greater latitude
than ordinary users.
Facebook defines politicians as candidates running for office, current
office holders and many cabinet appointees, along with political parties
and their leaders. Twitter's public interest rules https://help.twitter.com/en/rules-and-policies/public-interest
apply to verified government or elected officials, their appointed
successors and candidates, registered political parties or nominees for
public office that have more than 100,000 followers.
WHAT ARE THE CURRENT RULES?
Twitter says it errs on the side of leaving content up when it is in the
public interest, including keeping a record to hold leaders accountable.
It also allows leaders to interact with other public figures and engage
in "foreign policy saber-rattling."
In March, Twitter began adding warnings to and restricting the reach of
some world leaders' tweets that would be removed if sent by the average
user. Twitter also says it pulls world leaders' tweets down for offenses
like promoting terrorism or posting private information.
Facebook exempts politicians' posts and paid ads from its third-party
fact-checking program, though it did start affixing some separate
labels, for example, notices about voter fraud rarity on some of Trump's
posts around the election.
The company's "newsworthiness exemption" also allows politicians'
rule-breaking posts on the site if the public interest outweighs the
harm. (https://bit.ly/3aY0RN2)
Facebook, which had occasionally removed Trump's content for violations
like COVID-19 misinformation before he was banned, faced employee
backlash for its inaction on inflammatory posts including one during
anti-racism protests that said "when the looting starts, the shooting
starts."
Alphabet Inc's YouTube says it does not have different rules for world
leaders, though its exception for "educational" or "documentary" content
does allow certain news coverage of politicians making rule-breaking
statements.
SO WHAT HAPPENED WITH TRUMP?
After the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, Twitter banned Trump for breaking its
"glorification of violence" rules, departing somewhat from precedent to
take possible interpretations of his tweets into account.
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President Donald Trump taps the screen on a mobile phone in the
State Dining Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., June 18,
2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
Facebook blocked Trump's accounts on its platforms
indefinitely. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the current context meant the
risks of allowing him to use the service were "simply too great."
A slew of online platforms barred the former president, including
Snapchat, which had already removed him from its Discover program,
and Amazon-owned Twitch, which had previously suspended him for
hateful content in June.
YouTube also gave Trump's channel its first-ever strike following
the riot. This would normally come with a week-long suspension but
the account remains frozen months later. YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki
said the suspension will be lifted when the company determines the
risk of real-world violence has decreased.
WHAT ABOUT OTHER GLOBAL LEADERS?
Human rights groups have argued that the tech firms need to apply
standards consistently to other global leaders.
Facebook's suspension of Trump followed bans in recent years of some
government officials, including in India and Myanmar for promoting
violence, but the company had never before blocked a current
president, prime minister or head of state.
Leaders who have drawn particular public scrutiny but remain active
on social media sites include Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, who has used Twitter to call for Israel's elimination and
Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro, who has posted on Facebook that
indigenous citizens were "evolving" and becoming more human.
(https://reut.rs/3gWRnW1)
In March, Facebook put a 30-day freeze on Venezuelan President
Nicolas Maduro's page for spreading COVID-19 misinformation. Both
Maduro and Bolsonaro have previously had content removed by Facebook
and Twitter for this reason during the pandemic.
Earlier this year, Facebook banned the Myanmar military from the
site after they took power in a coup. U.N. human rights
investigators have previously said the platform played a key role in
fomenting violence in Myanmar.
WHAT'S HAPPENING NOW?
Both Facebook and Twitter have called for input on their rules after
facing intense scrutiny over their handling of U.S. presidential
election and the storming of the Capitol by pro-Trump supporters.
Facebook has asked its oversight board to give recommendations along
with the Trump decision, while Twitter opened a public survey.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Culliford; editing by Kenneth Li and Nick
Zieminski)
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