Trump’s Facebook ban should not be lifted,
network’s oversight board rules
Trump’s account suspended in wake of Capitol attack
Board says Facebook should make final decision in six
months
Martin
Pengelly and Kari Paul
Wed 5 May
2021 14.39 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/may/05/donald-trump-facebook-account-ban-oversight-board
Donald
Trump’s Facebook account should not be reinstated, the social media giant’s
oversight board said on Wednesday, barring an imminent return to the platform.
However,
the board has punted the final decision over Trump’s account back to Facebook
itself, suggesting the platform make a decision in six months regarding what to
do with Trump’s account and whether it will be permanently deleted.
Facebook
suspended Trump’s account after the Capitol attack of 6 January, when a mob of
Trump supporters stormed Congress in an attempt to overturn the former
president’s defeat by Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election.
Trump was
initially suspended from Facebook and Instagram for 24 hours, as a result of
two posts shared to the platform in which he appeared to praise the actions of
the rioters. The company then extended the president’s ban “at least until the
end of his time in office”.
His account
was suspended indefinitely pending the decision of the oversight board, a group
of appointed academics and former politicians meant to operate independently of
Facebook’s corporate leadership.
The board
assigned ultimate responsibility to the social media company regarding whether
the account will be given a reinstatement date and said Facebook must complete
its review of this matter within six months. It said Facebook failed to impose
proper penalties against Trump for violating its policies.
Facebook
typically removes violating content from an account, imposing a time-bound
period of suspension, or permanently disables the page and account. Trump’s
account remains on Facebook with a number of older posts still live.
“It was not
appropriate for Facebook to impose the indeterminate and standardless penalty
of indefinite suspension,” the oversight board said in a statement. “The board
insists that Facebook review this matter to determine and justify a
proportionate response that is consistent with the rules that are applied to
other users of its platform.”
The board
defines its mission as “to promote free expression by making principled,
independent decisions regarding content on Facebook and Instagram and by
issuing recommendations on the relevant Facebook company content policy”.
Members
include Helle Thorning-Schmidt, a former prime minister of Denmark; Jamal
Greene, a Columbia law professor; Tawakkol Karman, a Nobel peace prize winner
from Yemen; and Alan Rusbridger, a former editor of the Guardian.
But critics
have said Facebook should have made its own decisions rather than using the
body. They have also argued that the board is “designed and bankrolled by
Facebook”, calling in question its full independence.
In February
a group of scholars, advocates and activists calling itself the Real Facebook
Oversight Board said: “Real oversight must be combined with other critically
needed reforms: laws that change financial incentives for big tech, heavy
regulation and a reckoning with the algorithms that are laying waste to
democratic society.”
In response
to the announcement on Wednesday, the Real Oversight Board said the decision
proves “the Facebook oversight board experiment has failed”.
“This
verdict is a desperate attempt to have it both ways, upholding the ‘ban’ of
Donald Trump without actually banning him, while punting any real decisions
back to Facebook,” the group said.
Campaigners
have pushed for Trump’s suspension to be made permanent, pointing at the
importance of the platform for the former president in pushing his message.
In
February, Change the Terms, a coalition of more than 60 human rights groups,
said: “The board must acknowledge that Trump’s social media presence has made
not just Facebook users but the entire world less safe.”
Following
the Capitol riot, Trump was suspended from several major tech platforms,
including Twitter, YouTube and Snapchat. Twitter has since made its ban
permanent. YouTube’s CEO said in March that platform would lift it suspension
when the risk of violence decreases.
Five people
including a police officer died as a direct result of the Capitol attack and
more than 400 people have been charged in connection with it.
In a speech
outside the White House before the riot on 6 January, Trump told supporters to
“fight like hell” to advance his lie that his defeat was the product of massive
electoral fraud, a claim repeatedly laughed out of court. Democrats in Congress
impeached Trump for inciting an insurrection. He was acquitted when only seven
Republicans voted with Democrats to convict.

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