The Asian Age

Facebook says it will exempt political speeches from fact-checking

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San Francisco, Sept. 25: Facebook said it would not take down politician­s’ posts that violate its community standards and will not label them as rival Twitter has promised, saying it should not be the arbiter of acceptable speech in the political arena.

Social media platforms are under pressure to block election interferen­ce and be more transparen­t about policies on political content, after what U.S. authoritie­s called an extensive cyber-influence campaign by Russia aimed at helping elect President Donald Trump in 2016. Moscow has denied the claims.

Facebook will take down posts if a politician’s content has the potential to incite violence or pose a safety risk that outweighs the public interest value. And political advertisem­ents must still meet Facebook’s rules.

The kinds of posts from politician­s that could be kept up might include cruel or insensitiv­e comments or graphic content.

Facebook’s head of global affairs Nick Clegg announced the stance in a speech in Washington D.C. on the social media giant’s preparatio­ns for the U.S.

presidenti­al election November 2020.

“Would it be acceptable to society at large to have a private company in effect become a self-appointed

in referee for everything that politician­s say?” Clegg asked. “I don’t believe it would be.”

The comments follow Twitter’s announceme­nt in June that it would identify and de-emphasize tweets that broke its rules but were posted by important sources, such as politician­s and government officials.

If flagged, a notice would cover the offending tweet and require a user to click on a link to view it.

A Facebook spokeswoma­n told Reuters that newsworthy content from politician­s on Facebook would not be labeled to show it had violated the rules.

Clegg, who was previously Britain’s deputy prime minister, also said Facebook did not submit original content from politician­s to its independen­t fact-checkers. It will only demote and label previously debunked content that is shared by politician­s.

Facebook’s third-party fact-checking program, which is used to label and de-emphasize false content, has been a centerpiec­e of its fight against disinforma­tion.

A Facebook spokeswoma­n said the global policy would apply to politician­s at the executive, national and regional levels, including candidates for office.

Facebook’s stance on politician­s’ content builds on its policy, in place since 2016, to leave up content whose public interest it considers to outweigh the risk of harm.

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 ??  ?? The move follow Twitter’s announceme­nt in June that it would identify and de-emphasize tweets that broke its rules but were posted by important sources, such as politician­s and government officials.
The move follow Twitter’s announceme­nt in June that it would identify and de-emphasize tweets that broke its rules but were posted by important sources, such as politician­s and government officials.

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