Facebook bans extremist 'boogaloo' group from its
platforms
Although the term is not banned, the network has been
designated as a dangerous organization similar to white supremacists
Lois
Beckett and agencies
@loisbeckett
Published
onTue 30 Jun 2020 21.55 BST
Facebook
has banned an extremist anti-government network associated with the term
“boogaloo,” a slang word supporters use to refer to a second civil war.
Tuesday’s
move by Facebook designates the right-wing “boogaloo” network as a dangerous
organization similar to the Islamic State group and white supremacists, both of
which are already banned from its service.
The ban
comes months after researchers began warning Facebook that the “boogaloo”
groups flourishing on its platform were full of people discussing violence
against government officials and sharing guerrilla combat tactics.
Reports
from outside groups released in February and then in April both warned that the
“boogaloo” was a dangerous anti-government group trying to incite violence
against law enforcement officials.
While
Facebook began to take down some “boogaloo” posts and groups this spring, it
did not announce sweeping action against the extremist movement on its platform
until after two law enforcement officials had already been killed in
California.
A federal
security officer was shot to death in Oakland, California, on 30 May, and a
Santa Cruz sheriff sergeant was shot to death on 6 June. Their alleged killer
had posted about the “boogaloo” on Facebook, where he also connected with the
man charged as his accomplice, according to the criminal complaint against him.
As part of
Tuesday’s announcement of its “boogaloo” ban, Facebook said it has removed 220
Facebook accounts, 95 Instagram accounts, 28 pages and 106 groups that that
comprise the violent “boogaloo”-affiliated network. It also took down 400 other
groups and 100 pages that hosted similar content as the violent network but
were maintained by accounts outside of it.
Facebook’s
announcement of the “boogaloo” ban is a ‘“substantive action”, and “one of the
more widespread and transparent network disruption actions specifically
targeting non-state actors we’ve seen from the company yet”, said Alex
Newhouse, a digital researcher at the Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and
Counterterrorism at Middlebury Institute for International Studies, who has
been tracking the “boogaloo” movement on Facebook for several months.
But
Newhouse said that he and other researchers had already identified at least 20
“boogaloo” groups which were still live on Facebook after the ban, including
some that were direct backups or clones of pages that had been banned.
Several
researchers who monitor ”boogaloo” groups on Facebook said they had already
identified multiple groups that had been missed by Facebook’s ban.
“As with
everything Facebook does, it was too little and too late,” said Katie Paul, the
director of the Tech Transparency Project, which produced a report warning
about boogaloo groups on Facebook in April.
Facebook’s
attempt to distinguish between violent and non-violent boogaloo groups was
“particularly dangerous,” said Joan Donovan, the director of the Shorenstein
Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.
This is “a
fallacy that allows some white supremacists to continue to operate so long as
they tone down their violent rhetoric,” Donovan wrote in an e-mail.
In
announcing its new ban, Facebook also said that it was still trying to
distinguish between a “violent” “boogaloo” network that it had banned from the
platform, and what it described as a different, “broader and loosely-affiliated
boogaloo movement” that does not seek to commit violence.
The social
network is not banning all references to “boogaloo” and said it is only
removing groups, accounts and pages when they have a “clear connection to
violence or a credible threat to public safety”.
“The
boogaloo ecosystem that gives rise to violent extremism is larger than just the
network that Facebook disrupted,” Newhouse said.
“Boogaloo”
supporters have shown up at protests over Covid-19 lockdown orders, carrying
rifles and wearing tactical gear over Hawaiian shirts. Facebook said the
movement dates back to 2012 and that it has been tracking it closely since last
year.
Facebook
said it has so far found no evidence of foreign actors amplifying
“boogaloo”-related material.
Social
media companies are facing a reckoning over hate speech on their platforms.
Reddit, an online comment forum that is one of the world’s most popular
websites, on Monday banned a forum that supported Donald Trump as part of a
crackdown on hate speech.
Live-streaming
site Twitch, which is owned by Amazon, also temporarily suspended Trump’s
campaign account for violating its hateful conduct rules. YouTube, meanwhile,
banned several prominent white nationalist figures from its platform, including
Stefan Molyneux, David Duke and Richard Spencer.
And
pressure is rising on Facebook to rein in Trump’s social media behavior.
Facebook’s decision to allow a post by Trump that read “when the looting starts
the shooting starts” to remain on the platform has led to a growing advertiser
boycott that includes Unilever, Levi’s, Coca-Cola and Starbucks.
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