Facebook oversight board to rule on Trump's return to Facebook
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[May 05, 2021]
By Elizabeth Culliford
(Reuters) - Facebook Inc's oversight board
on Wednesday will decide whether to uphold the company's indefinite
suspension of former U.S. President Donald Trump, in a much-awaited
verdict that may signal how the company will treat rule-breaking world
leaders in the future.
Facebook indefinitely blocked Trump's access to his Facebook and
Instagram accounts over concerns of further violent unrest following the
Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of the former
president.
At the time of the suspension, Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg
said in a post that "the risks of allowing the President to continue to
use our service during this period are simply too great." The company
later referred the case to its recently established board, which
includes academics, lawyers and rights activists, to decide whether to
uphold the ban or restore Trump.
"Both of those decisions are no-win decisions for Facebook," said Kate
Klonick, an assistant law professor at St. John's University who
embedded at Facebook to follow the board's creation. "So, offloading
those to a third party, the Oversight Board, is a win for them no matter
what."
The binding verdict marks a major decision for the board, which rules on
a small slice of challenging content decisions and which Facebook
created as an independent body as a response to criticism over how it
handles problematic material. Facebook has also asked the board to
provide recommendations on how it should handle political leaders'
accounts.
Tech platforms have grappled in recent years with how to police world
leaders and politicians that violate their guidelines. Facebook has come
under fire both from those who think it should abandon its hands-off
approach to political speech and those who saw the Trump ban as a
worrying act of censorship.
If the board overturns Trump's ban, it will restore to the former
president a social media megaphone he has lacked since being barred in
January from platforms including Twitter Inc, which permanently banned
him from posting to his more than 88 million followers, and Snap Inc.
Facebook will have seven days to act on the board's decision.
Trump, who has been sending out short, emailed press releases, continued
to promote election misinformation in one on Monday, saying "the
Fraudulent Presidential Election of 2020 will be, from this day forth,
known as THE BIG LIE!"
On Tuesday, he launched a new webpage to share messages that readers can
then re-post to their Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Facebook has said Trump, who has 35 million Facebook followers, would be
subject to the same policies as ordinary users after the end of his
presidency. This means that if Trump returned to the platform, his posts
would now be eligible for fact-checking. Following a widening of the
board's scope in April, Facebook users would also be able to appeal the
former president's posts to the board.
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The Facebook logo is displayed on a mobile phone in this picture
illustration taken December 2, 2019. REUTERS/Johanna Geron/Illustration/File
Photo/File Photo
CONTROVERSIAL DECISION
Trump's suspension was the first time Facebook had blocked a current
president, prime minister or head of state. Facebook's oversight
board said it received more than 9,000 comments from the public on
the Trump ban, the most it has had for a case so far.
Several academics and civil rights groups have publicly shared their
letters urging the board to block Trump permanently, while
Republican lawmakers and some free expression advocates have
criticized the decision.
Since taking action on Trump, social media companies have faced
calls from some rights groups and activists to be more consistent in
their approach to other world leaders who have pushed or broken
their rules, such as Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Leader Ali
Khamenei, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and lawmakers linked to
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
"I would hope that they're also thinking about the precedent-setting
of this," said Katie Harbath, a former Facebook public policy
director and a fellow at the Washington D.C.-based Bipartisan Policy
Center. "What does that look like internationally, what does that
look like in the long term?" she added.
The Oversight Board, an idea that Zuckerberg first publicly floated
in 2018, currently has 20 members, including former Danish Prime
Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt and several law experts and rights
advocates. Decisions need only majority approval.
The board, which some have dubbed Facebook's "Supreme Court," has
been hailed as a novel experiment by some researchers but blasted by
other critics who have been skeptical over its independence or view
it as a PR stunt to deflect attention from the company's more
systemic problems.
It is funded through a $130 million trust created by Facebook and
has so far made rulings on a small number of cases from hate speech
to nudity.
Facebook's head of global affairs Nick Clegg told Reuters in January
that he was "very confident" of the company's case on Trump's ban
and said "any reasonable person" looking at Facebook's policies and
the circumstances would agree.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Culliford in New York; Editing by Kenneth Li
and Nick Zieminski)
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