Daily Dispatch

Instagram, Twitter blame glitches for deleting Palestinia­n posts

- Thomson

Instagram and Twitter have blamed technical errors for deleting posts mentioning the possible eviction of Palestinia­ns from East Jerusalem, but data rights groups fear “discrimina­tory” algorithms are at work and want greater transparen­cy.

Palestinia­ns living in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourh­ood claimed by Jewish settlers have taken to social media to protest as they face eviction, but some found their posts, photos or videos removed or their accounts blocked starting last week.

It came as a long-running legal case over evictions from homes in Sheikh Jarrah has fuelled tensions in Jerusalem where hundreds of Palestinia­ns clashed with Israeli police on Monday.

By Monday, 7amleh, a nonprofit focused on social media, had received more than 200 complaints about deleted posts and suspended accounts related to Sheikh Jarrah.

“On Instagram, it was mostly content takedown, even archives from older stories were deleted. On Twitter, most cases were an account suspension,” said Mona Shtaya, an advocacy adviser at 7amleh.

Instagram and Twitter said the accounts were “suspended in error by our automated systems” and the issue had been resolved and content reinstated.

Instagram said an automated update last week caused content reshared by multiple users to appear as missing, affecting posts on Sheikh Jarrah, Colombia, and US and Canadian indigenous communitie­s.

“We are so sorry this happened.

“Especially to those in Colombia, East Jerusalem, and Indigenous communitie­s who felt this was an intentiona­l suppressio­n of their voices and their stories — that was not our intent.”

But in a joint statement, 7amleh, Access Now, and other digital rights groups called on Twitter and Instagram to use “transparen­t and coherent moderation policies“and be more open when takedowns happen.

Marwa Fatafta, Middle East and North Africa policy adviser for Access Now, said Twitter and Instagram users saw continued restrictio­ns on content over the weekend.

“The issue was not resolved. We’re demanding clarity on this censorship, and system glitches are no longer accepted as an excuse,” she said.

One of those affected was Hind Khoudary, a 25-year-old Palestinia­n journalist based in Turkey, who noticed last Thursday that some posts about Sheikh Jarrah from her Instagram archives were not loading. “I restarted my phone and my Wi-fi, but it was all still missing and Instagram was very slow,” Khoudary said.

Some of her posts had been restored by Friday afternoon but some, dating as far back as April and even as recently as Saturday, were still missing according to screenshot­s from her phone.

Some affected users received messages about “violating community standards” from Instagram.

Shtaya said 7amleh was still fielding complaints about disappeare­d content. “It’s supposed to be done but we are still receiving reports,” she said.

Data rights groups said the technical glitch had revealed the risks of using an automated algorithm to try to weed out violent or otherwise inappropri­ate posts. —

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