Fact:
On May 8, 2019, Taliban insurgents detonated an explosive-laden vehicle and then broke into American NGO Counterpart International’s offices in Kabul. At least seven people were killed and 24 were injured.
In March 2018, reports surfaced that the private information of up to 87 million Facebook users had been harvested by the firm Cambridge Analytica since 2014. This was not the first time Facebook had received backlash for the mishandling of user data: Facebook first issued an apology on the issue in 2007, when a feature called Beacon tracked and shared users’ online activity without expressly asking them for permission. In 2013, after admitting to a year-long data breach that exposed the personal information of 6 million users, Facebook promised to “work doubly hard to make sure nothing like this happens again.” Nonetheless, Facebook rushed to update its data policy immediately following the latest scandal, publishing at least five press releases detailing new measures and adjustments issued in March and April of 2018. (Reuters, New York Times, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom)
For over a decade, Facebook has faced criticism for the misuse of its platform on issues ranging from the publication of inappropriate content to user privacy and safety. Rather than taking preventative measures, Facebook has too often jumped to make policy changes after damage has already been done. The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) has documented instances in which Facebook has made express policy changes following public accusations, a scandal, or pressure from lawmakers. While one would hope that Facebook is continuously working to improve security on its platform, there is no excuse as to why so many policy changes have been reactive, and it raises the question as to what other scandals are in the making due to still-undiscovered lapses in Facebook’s current policy. (Reuters, New York Times, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom, Facebook Newsroom)
November 2007: Facebook receives backlash in response to its Beacon advertising feature, which tracks users’ actions on other websites and shares it with their friends on Facebook. (New York Times)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
February 2009: North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper and Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal demand that Facebook and other social media sites enact more privacy controls to protect children and teenagers. According to Blumenthal, a preliminary number of sex offenders found on Facebook was “substantial.” (NBC News)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
August 2009: The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada recommends policy changes to Facebook after a year-long investigation of Facebook’s privacy policies and controls. The investigation was launched following a complaint from the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic. (Facebook Newsroom, Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
May 2010: Facebook receives “intense criticism” from users over the complicated nature of the site’s privacy settings, including accusations that the site is trying to force people to share their data. (Guardian)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
November 2011: The Federal Trade Commission launches an eight-count complaint against Facebook charging the site with deceiving consumers by telling them they could keep their information on Facebook private. According to the complaint, Facebook told consumers that third-party apps could only access users’ information needed to operate, when in reality they could access nearly all of a user’s personal data. Facebook was also charged with sharing user information with advertisers. (Federal Trade Commission, Federal Trade Commission, NBC News)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
May 2013: A women’s activist campaign highlight pages on Facebook glorifying rape and violence against women, many of which passed the site’s moderation process. Several businesses pull their ads from Facebook as a result. (CNN, Women, Action, & the Media, Reuters)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
October 2013: The Daily Beast and The Verge reveal that Facebook as well as its photo- and video-sharing platform Instagram are being used for private firearms sales, and that the sites have no related policy regulations in place. (The Verge)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
2016: Throughout the year, U.K. and European lawmakers express concern that social media platforms have become a “vehicle of choice” for extremists to recruit and radicalize. Several governments threaten legislative action against the tech companies. (Telegraph, Reuters, Wired)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
November 2016: Facebook is initially accused of proliferating “fake news stories” on its site that may have swayed the 2016 presidential election. (Vox)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
March 2017: Facebook faces backlash after a report surfaces revealing that hundreds of U.S. Marines were sharing nude photos of female colleagues and making degrading comments about them in a private Facebook group. (Buzzfeed, Reveal)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
May-June 2017: U.K. and European lawmakers increase pressure against tech companies, calling for new laws to punish companies that continue to host extremist material on their platforms. On May 1, the U.K. Home Affairs Committee publishes a report saying that tech companies are “shamefully far” from taking action to tackle illegal and hateful content. In June, U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May calls on fellow G7 members to pressure tech companies to do much more to remove hateful and extremist material. In May, the Guardian also publishes details of Facebook’s content moderation guidelines on controversial topics such as sex, terrorism, and violence. The documents expose Facebook’s contradictory positions on these issues, which have resulted in the company’s ongoing inability to remove unwanted content. (CNBC, U.K. Home Affairs Committee, Guardian, Guardian)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
September-October 2017: Facebook discloses that the Internet Research Agency, a Russian company linked to the Russian government, bought more than $100,000 worth of political ads and disseminated content that reached 126 million users on Facebook in an attempt to sow discord among American citizens prior to the 2016 presidential election. Facebook receives additional accusations, including from U.S. President Donald Trump, that misinformation and “fake news” was spread on the platform in an attempt to influence the election. (New York Times, New York Times, Twitter, Facebook)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
March 2018: Facebook faces backlash about how it handles user data. U.S. and British lawmakers ask the company to explain how Cambridge Analytica was able to collect private information on more than 50 million Facebook accounts without alerting users. (New York Times)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
April–June 2018: In a Congressional hearing in April, U.S. lawmakers demand accountability from Facebook with respect to its handling of user data. In June, the Wall Street Journal reveals that Facebook struck deals with companies, including Nissan Motor Co. and the Royal Bank of Canada, in 2015 that gave them access to the personal data of users. (Wall Street Journal, Wall Street Journal, Chicago Tribune)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
July 2018: The British documentary series Channel 4 Dispatches reveals that Facebook instructed content moderators to allow specific right-wing Pages containing content that violates Facebook’s rules to remain on the site because they generate “a lot of revenue for Facebook.” The allegation comes after the series sent an undercover reporter to work as a content moderator at CPL Resources, a third-party firm in Dublin, Ireland, contracted by Facebook. (Guardian)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
July 2018: Facebook faces growing criticism from human rights groups and international media for allowing content on its site that has incited violence. In October 2017, United Nations investigators and human rights groups accused Facebook of allowing anti-Muslim hate speech on its site that facilitated violence against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. In April 2018, the New York Times published an article highlighting false news on Facebook that encouraged violence against Sri Lanka’s Muslims. Since April 2018, at least 24 people are killed across India in lynchings and other violent mob attacks, which were reportedly motivated by false reports of child kidnappings that were spread over the Facebook-owned messaging platform WhatsApp. (New York Times, New York Times, New York Times, Washington Post, BBC News)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
November 14, 2018: The New York Times publishes a report detailing how COO Sheryl Sandberg and other Facebook executives worked to downplay and spin bad news. The article reveals that Facebook failed to act against the Russian campaign to disrupt the 2016 U.S. presidential elections and Cambridge Analytica’s effort to collect millions of users’ private data. Moreover, the New York Times exposes how Facebook engaged with a public relations firm to criticize its competitors while deemphasizing concerns about Facebook’s own problems. (New York Times, CNBC)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
March 2019: Facebook faces criticism from lawmakers, advertisers, and the media after gunman Brenton Harrison Tarrant uses Facebook Live to broadcast the March 15 shootings at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, killing 50 people. New Zealand police has to alert Facebook to the presence of the 17-minute video, which was viewed approximately 4,000 times by the time Facebook removes it. (Fox News, CBS News, Washington Post, Washington Post, CNN)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
August 2019: On August 3, Patrick Crusius opens fire at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, killing 22 people and injuring at least 27 others. Crusius, a 21-year-old white man from Allen, Texas, confesses to authorities that he sought to target Mexicans. Investigators believe Crusius published a racist and xenophobic manifesto—which discusses a “Hispanic invasion of Texas”—on 8chan’s “politically incorrect” online message board prior to his shooting rampage. Copies of the white supremacist manifesto subsequently appear on Facebook and Twitter. (USA Today, Vox, New York Times, CNET)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
June 2020: On June 17, a coalition of civil rights groups launch Stop Hate for Profit. The campaign calls upon Facebook’s advertisers to boycott ad spending on the social media platform for the month of July in light of Facebook’s handling of misinformation and hate speech. Over the following week, major corporations like The North Face, Verizon, Unilever, and Honda America commit to joining the advertising boycott. Backlash against the company had intensified as misinformation and hateful content continued to appear on the platform amid U.S. protests against racism and police brutality. Facebook also previously refused to label or remove a post by U.S. President Donald Trump that said, “when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” in May. (New York Times, New York Times, Forbes, Washington Post)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
Summer 2020: The Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany leads a campaign to directly call on CEO Mark Zuckerberg to remove Holocaust denial posts from the popular social media platform. The #NoDenyingIt campaign encourages Holocaust survivors to post a video message addressing Zuckerberg on Facebook and Facebook-owned Instagram. Zuckerberg was also criticized in July 2018 when in an interview with tech website Recode, he said that Facebook should not remove Holocaust-denying content because he did not think users were necessarily “intentionally getting it wrong.” (Associated Press, PR Newswire, CNBC, BBC News)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
December 2020: Ireland’s Department of Justice proposes new hate speech laws. The proposed bill—which is set to go before the Irish Cabinet in spring 2021—will make, among other things, the sharing of hate speech on social media a criminal offense. The proposal also concludes that “a company accused of displaying or distributing hateful material should be able to defend itself by showing that it has reasonable measures in place to prevent dissemination of this type of material in general, was complying with those measures at the time and was unaware and had no reason to suspect that this particular content was inciteful.” (Irish Central, Irish Times, Ireland’s Department of Justice)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
February 2021: A U.S. federal judge approves a $650 million settlement—one of the largest for privacy violations—of a lawsuit against Facebook for allegedly using face-tagging and other biometric data without users’ permission. The class action lawsuit was filed in Illinois in 2015, with nearly 1.6 million Facebook users in the state submitting claims. (Associated Press, NBC News)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
August 2021: On August 15, the Taliban takeover the Afghan government and ramp up its presence on social media platforms. The events reportedly lead to some confusion among tech companies on how to moderate Taliban content. (New York Times)
Subsequent Policy Change(s)
Extremists: Their Words. Their Actions.
Fact:
On May 8, 2019, Taliban insurgents detonated an explosive-laden vehicle and then broke into American NGO Counterpart International’s offices in Kabul. At least seven people were killed and 24 were injured.
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