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posted by mrpg on Monday May 22 2017, @10:01PM   Printer-friendly
from the +1-interesting dept.

The Guardian has posted a number of documents in connection with their investigation of Facebook's policies:

Facebook's secret rules and guidelines for deciding what its 2 billion users can post on the site are revealed for the first time in a Guardian investigation that will fuel the global debate about the role and ethics of the social media giant.

The Guardian has seen more than 100 internal training manuals, spreadsheets and flowcharts that give unprecedented insight into the blueprints Facebook has used to moderate issues such as violence, hate speech, terrorism, pornography, racism and self-harm. There are even guidelines on match-fixing and cannibalism.

The Facebook Files give the first view of the codes and rules formulated by the site, which is under huge political pressure in Europe and the US.

They illustrate difficulties faced by executives scrabbling to react to new challenges such as "revenge porn" – and the challenges for moderators, who say they are overwhelmed by the volume of work, which means they often have "just 10 seconds" to make a decision. "Facebook cannot keep control of its content," said one source. "It has grown too big, too quickly."

Many moderators are said to have concerns about the inconsistency and peculiar nature of some of the policies. Those on sexual content, for example, are said to be the most complex and confusing.

Here's a reaction from a UK child safety charity:

Asked for a response to Facebook's moderation guidelines, a spokesperson for the UK's National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children described the rules as "alarming" and called for independent regulation of the platform's moderation policies — backed up with fines for non-compliance.

"This insight into Facebook's rules on moderating content is alarming to say the least," the spokesperson told us. "There is much more Facebook can do to protect children on their site. Facebook, and other social media companies, need to be independently regulated and fined when they fail to keep children safe."

See also: EU audiovisual reform will create a nanny state (Estonian MEP opinion)


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 23 2017, @08:05AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 23 2017, @08:05AM (#514075)

    While that's annoying it's more of a niche problem, it doesn't have a very broad appeal and likely never will (it appears to have passed its peak of popularity just in the last year, in fact.)

    It has not passed its popularity, it has passed on from the popular news to more mundane and unreported thing called the law. Now you won't hear about it, you will only hear about the increase in rape and "rape-culture" (ugh...) and occasionally you will be asked to contribute your hate towards a rapist who is not getting convicted, until it is you. Then no one will hear you.