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Facebook on trial for 'censorship' after deplatforming Polish nationalist pages | Facebook on trial for 'censorship' after deplatforming Polish nationalist pages |
(about 7 hours later) | |
A Polish historian has taken Facebook to court over the company's increasingly heavy-handed censorship practices, accusing the social network of discrimination based on nationality, political views and religion. | A Polish historian has taken Facebook to court over the company's increasingly heavy-handed censorship practices, accusing the social network of discrimination based on nationality, political views and religion. |
Maciej Swirski, president of the Polish League Against Defamation, has complained that Facebook suspended multiple accounts that posted information about a 2016 Independence Day march sponsored by nationalist groups, even though nothing about the event or the posts appeared to violate the site's rules. | Maciej Swirski, president of the Polish League Against Defamation, has complained that Facebook suspended multiple accounts that posted information about a 2016 Independence Day march sponsored by nationalist groups, even though nothing about the event or the posts appeared to violate the site's rules. |
"I'm not a member of the National Movement, but as a citizen I wanted to inform myself on the event in question and I was blocked from doing so," he told AFP, adding that while the platform had not censored his own speech, it had prevented him from accessing "content that I had wanted to see." | "I'm not a member of the National Movement, but as a citizen I wanted to inform myself on the event in question and I was blocked from doing so," he told AFP, adding that while the platform had not censored his own speech, it had prevented him from accessing "content that I had wanted to see." |
"We'd like to know what mechanisms Facebook uses to moderate content," Swirski said. In interviews with Polish media, he pointed out that anti-Catholic and anti-Christian pages were permitted to remain on the site despite hosting much more offensive content than the pages Facebook removed. | "We'd like to know what mechanisms Facebook uses to moderate content," Swirski said. In interviews with Polish media, he pointed out that anti-Catholic and anti-Christian pages were permitted to remain on the site despite hosting much more offensive content than the pages Facebook removed. |
Facebook has already tried to move the trial to a sealed courtroom in Palo Alto, California, but the Warsaw court hearing the case refused the change of venue. While Facebook's lawyers claim that as a private firm it is not obligated to publish any content, Swirski has argued the "global giant" is not a regular media company. The first hearing in the case took place on Wednesday, and the next one is scheduled for October 30. | Facebook has already tried to move the trial to a sealed courtroom in Palo Alto, California, but the Warsaw court hearing the case refused the change of venue. While Facebook's lawyers claim that as a private firm it is not obligated to publish any content, Swirski has argued the "global giant" is not a regular media company. The first hearing in the case took place on Wednesday, and the next one is scheduled for October 30. |
Swirski has previously attacked the international media for its negative portrayal of Polish Independence Day celebrations, calling a BBC report on last year's celebratory parade a "sick joke" for its focus on "far right groups" and sensationalistic photos of handheld fireworks "that made Warsaw look like a riot zone," adding that the prime minister had expressly warned "foreign neo-fascists or other agitators" to steer clear of the festivities. | |
Facebook removed at least 27 Polish pages with nearly 2 million followers in the run-up to last month's EU parliamentary elections, at the prompting of online "activist network" Avaaz, whose researchers claimed to have uncovered nearly 200 right-wing pages and groups spreading "divisive content" including – but not limited to – "false and misleading information." | |
The Avaaz report targeted multiple EU countries, leading to 77 pre-election page takedowns and further fueling criticism that Facebook is unevenly enforcing its rules to target the political Right. The platform recently banned a number of prominent American conservative users and has declared war on the poorly-defined concept of "white nationalism," though its enforcement policy remains opaque and many users on both the Right and Left have accused the site of ideologically-motivated deplatforming. | The Avaaz report targeted multiple EU countries, leading to 77 pre-election page takedowns and further fueling criticism that Facebook is unevenly enforcing its rules to target the political Right. The platform recently banned a number of prominent American conservative users and has declared war on the poorly-defined concept of "white nationalism," though its enforcement policy remains opaque and many users on both the Right and Left have accused the site of ideologically-motivated deplatforming. |
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