HEALTH CARE
Facebook no longer treating 'man-made' Covid as a
crackpot idea
Facebook’s policy tweak arrives as support surges in
Washington for a fuller investigation into the origins of Covid-19.
Facebook will no longer take down posts claiming that
Covid-19 was man-made or manufactured. |
By
CRISTIANO LIMA
05/26/2021
06:22 PM EDT
Updated:
05/26/2021 10:34 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/05/26/facebook-ban-covid-man-made-491053
Facebook
will no longer take down posts claiming that Covid-19 was man-made or
manufactured, a company spokesperson told POLITICO on Wednesday, a move that
acknowledges the renewed debate about the virus’ origins.
A narrative
in flux: Facebook’s policy tweak arrives as support surges in Washington for a
fuller investigation into the origins of Covid-19 after the Wall Street Journal
reported that three scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology were
hospitalized in late 2019 with symptoms consistent with the virus. The findings
have reinvigorated the debate about the so-called Wuhan lab-leak theory, once
dismissed as a fringe conspiracy theory.
President
Joe Biden said Wednesday that he has ordered the intelligence community to
“redouble” its efforts to find out the virus’ origin and report back in 90
days. Biden also revealed that the intelligence community is split between two
theories about Covid-19’s origin, and said the review will examine “whether it
emerged from human contact with an infected animal or from a laboratory
accident.” Bipartisan support is also building on Capitol Hill for a
congressional inquiry.
But the
focus of late has been on the notion that the virus may have accidentally
escaped from the lab, not that it was man-made or purposely released — theories
that could now propagate on Facebook. Genetic studies of the virus have found
flaws in the protein it uses to bind to human cells. Those are features that
someone trying to engineer a bioweapon likely would have avoided.
Shifting
definitions on social media: Facebook announced in February it had expanded the
list of misleading health claims that it would remove from its platforms to
include those asserting that "COVID-19 is man-made or manufactured."
The tech giant has updated its policies against false and misleading
coronavirus information, including its running list of debunked claims, over
the course of the pandemic in consultation with global health officials.
But a
Facebook spokesperson said Wednesday that the origin language had been stricken
from that list due to the renewed debate about the virus’ roots.
“In light
of ongoing investigations into the origin of COVID-19 and in consultation with
public health experts, we will no longer remove the claim that COVID-19 is
man-made from our apps,” the spokesperson said in an emailed statement. “We’re
continuing to work with health experts to keep pace with the evolving nature of
the pandemic and regularly update our policies as new facts and trends emerge.”
Policies
under the microscope: Social media companies have faced intense pressure from
congressional Democrats to crack down more forcefully on misinformation about
the virus throughout the pandemic, with House lawmakers hauling in the CEOs of
Facebook, Twitter and Google for a hearing on the matter in March.
Other
platforms including Twitter have said that misleading claims about the virus’
roots may also violate its policies. But Facebook’s move marks the first major
sign prominent social media companies are revisiting those rules as the Wuhan
lab-leak theory gains attention.
Asked
whether Twitter plans to revisit its own rules on Covid-19 origin claims, a
company spokesperson said late Wednesday they had no updates to share at this
time. Twitter continues to "work in close consultation with global public
health authorities" on coronavirus misinformation issues, the spokesperson
said in a statement.
Spokespeople
for Google-owned YouTube did not return requests for comment on whether the
company is revisiting its policies relating to claims about the virus' origins.
Lauren
Morello contributed to this report.
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