One year after the Cambridge Analytica Scandal, Facebook says it really cares. Is that enough?
Last year, a Facebook user in Sri Lanka posted an angry message to the social network. “Kill all the Muslim babies without sparing even an infant,” the person wrote in Sinhala, the language of the country’s Buddhist majority. “ F---ing dogs!”
The post went up early in 2018, in white text and on one of the playful pink and purple backgrounds that Facebook Inc. began offering in 2016 to encourage its users to share more with one another. The sentiment about killing Muslims got 30 likes before someone else found it troubling enough to click the “give feedback” button instead. The whistleblower selected the option for “hate speech,” one of nine possible categories for objectionable content on Facebook.
For years nonprofits in Sri Lanka have warned that Facebook posts are playing a role in escalating ethnic tensions between Sinhalese Buddhists and Tamil Muslims, but the company had ignored them. It took six days for Facebook to respond to the hate speech report. “Thanks for the feedback,” the company told the whistleblower, who posted the response to Twitter. The content, Facebook continued, “doesn’t go against one of our specific Community Standards.”
The post stayed online, part of a wave of calls for violence against Muslims that flooded the network last year. False rumors circulated widely on Facebook claiming Muslims were putting sterilization pills in Buddhists’ food. In late February 2018 a mob attacked a Muslim restaurant owner in Ampara, a small town in eastern Sri Lanka. He survived, but there were more riots in the midsize city of Kandy the following week, resulting in two deaths before the government stepped in, taking measures that included ordering Facebook offline for three days.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 18, 2019-Ausgabe von Bloomberg Businessweek.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 18, 2019-Ausgabe von Bloomberg Businessweek.
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