Facebook to change rules on attacking public figures
Facebook Inc will now count activists and journalists as
"involuntary" public figures and so increase protections against
harassment and bullying targeted at these groups, its global safety chief said
in an interview this week.
The social media company, which allows more critical
commentary of public figures than of private individuals, is changing its
approach on the harassment of journalists and "human rights
defenders," who it says are in the public eye due to their work rather
than their public personas.
Facebook is under wide-ranging scrutiny from global
lawmakers and regulators over its content moderation practices and harms linked
to its platforms, with internal documents leaked by a whistleblower forming the
basis for a U.S. Senate hearing last week.
How Facebook, which has about 2.8 billion monthly active
users, treats public figures and content posted by or about those figures has
been an area of intense debate. In recent weeks, the company's "cross
check" system, which the Wall Street Journal reported has the effect of
exempting some high-profile users from usual Facebook rules, has been in the
spotlight.
Facebook also differentiates between public figures and
private individuals in the protections it affords around online discussion: for
instance, users are generally allowed to call for the death of a celebrity in
discussions on the platform, as long as they do not tag or directly mention the
celebrity. They cannot call for the death of a private individual, or now a
journalist, under Facebook's policies.
The company declined to share a list of other involuntary
public figures but said they are assessed on a case-by-case basis. Earlier this
year, Facebook said it would remove content celebrating, praising or mocking
George Floyd's death, because he was deemed an involuntary public figure.
Facebook's Global Head of Safety Antigone Davis said the
company was also expanding the types of attacks that it would not allow on
public figures on its sites, as part of an effort to reduce attacks
disproportionately faced by women, people of color and the LGBTQ community.
Facebook will no longer allow severe and unwanted
sexualizing content, derogatory sexualized photoshopped images or drawings or
direct negative attacks on a person's appearance, for example, in comments on a
public figure's profile.
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