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Facebook Australia Social Networks Technology

Facebook Says It Was 'Not Our Role' To Remove Fake News During Australian Election (theguardian.com) 138

Facebook has declared it is not "our role to remove content that one side of a political debate considers to be false" in a final, positive, self-assessment of its actions in response to the death tax misinformation circulating on the platform during the May federal election. From a report: In correspondence seen by Guardian Australia, Simon Milner, the Singapore-based vice-president of the social media giant in the Asia-Pacific, tells Labor's outgoing national secretary, Noah Carroll: "I understand that your preference would be for Facebook to remove all content that you believe constitutes misinformation -- which in this instance mean all content that discussed whether or not Labor intends to introduce a death tax -- rather than demote it; however Facebook only removes content that violates our community standards. "We do not agree that is is our role to remove content that one side of a political debate considers to be false," Milner says in the letter sent a month after election day.
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Facebook Says It Was 'Not Our Role' To Remove Fake News During Australian Election

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  • by butchersong ( 1222796 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @04:54PM (#59019818)
    It would be nice to get some consistency from the major platforms on this stuff. I guess part of the reason for the lack of hard and fast rules though is that it leaves them wiggle room to do as they like, as the situation suits.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      This. They only care about censoring it if it is an American conservative view point.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        WTF? When is the last time anyone had a conservative viewpoint? When the Republicans completely abandoned conservativism in 2016 to create a new alternative left, that was that. Nearly the entire population abandoned ship with them. The only viewpoints I see now are liberals (Republicans) vs progressives (Democrats). Even libertarians, both big-L and small-l have kept a damn low profile thanks to Gary Johnson not even getting second place in the one election where he really should have.

        Show me a person wit

      • by Maritz ( 1829006 )

        This. They only care about censoring it if it is an American conservative view point.

        lol. The only reason you have Vlad's puppet cheeto benito as president is because of the GRU's fake news campaign on facebook. Dumbass dickhead.

    • Who cares about the platforms? The problem is the audience...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Which is why they will be regulated one way or another, eventually. The power is not being used responsibly, it's in furtherance of fraud. This inevitably will come to a head.

  • There is a big difference between Politically declared "Fake News" and actual fact. One is provable, the other not. If the "Fake News" you publish online is provably false then you should be held fully liable for the damage that it causes. Monetary damages. Even if you are Facebook, the self-declared center of the Universe.
    • De minimis non curat lex (the law does not concern itself with trifles) is generally held to be a good principle, so outlawing any false statement of fact probably isn't a good idea, and how would you calculate the monetary damages for the loss of an election?

      It's an interesting concept, but it has practical problems (and then some). I do however believe that we'll see more and more false statements being subject to civil damages. Alex Jones denying the Sandy Hook massacre seems like a stretch of what until

    • by makomk ( 752139 )

      If there's one thing this demonstrates, it's that there is no such clear-cut line. The Guardian insists that because their preferred political party's PR department claimed they weren't going to introduce an unpopular tax, anyone claiming otherwise is "fake news" and those claims must be suppressed by Facebook - but politicians introduce laws that they said they wouldn't all the fucking time. Arguing that a politician is going to do something that fits with their goals but is too unpopular to publicly suppo

  • of content.

    In other words, there should be enabling of a free market of third party filter organizations/services/companies that offer content filtering between "raw facebook", "raw youtube" etc and the consumer of the content.

    People could then choose how they want their input filtered.

    With that available, and as long as easy to use, then the governments can stick their regulatory noses somewhere else.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      With that available, and as long as easy to use, then the governments can stick their regulatory noses somewhere else.

      Nope. The advocates of censorship aren't concerned about what they see. They want to control what you see. So individually controlled filtering solves nothing.

    • The theory sounds nice; freedom, personal choice, etc.. There's a terrible trouble with it though. I'm not sure what an appropriate answer is but if it's left unanswered, the conditions that have lead to the mass exploitations, great wars, societal collapse, etc. of history come to the stage. This trouble stems from the reality that people are willing to believe a fiction when it aligns with their world view. The more they consume and accept these fictions as truth the greater these distortions of their

      • I understand what you're saying, but with the advent of totally convincing deepfake videos of politicians, near-undetectable fake photographs, machine-written news stories, and increasingly shameless lying, misleading, and distorting by media, officials, and Joe and Jane Poster, I believe there is no solution other than educating people to do critical thinking at all times when assessing new information, be it visual, auditory, or written. People need to be inoculated from this stuff from early educational
      • The theory sounds nice; freedom, personal choice, etc.. There's a terrible trouble with it though.

        That sounds like the opening to a short book titled "Deep Thoughts, by Stalin".

    • But there is no market for that product and the current internet giants make every effort they can to prevent that from happening. Their business model depends on the end-user NOT being able to filter, so that they can sell those consumers to advertisers. This is one of the reasons that none of the social media giants have open standards. That would allow a user to filter out the junk they're pushing because someone paid them and the (often false) junk they're pushing to keep the user "engaged" until the
      • But there is no market for that product and the current internet giants make every effort they can to prevent that from happening.

        (Emphasis mine) I think the opposite is true; there is a good demand for that product, and it'll likely be so successful and deemed "superior" that it'll cannibalize the original product - even while profitability of this new product is deemed untested and questionable by the Execs.

        Leaders from Tech Oligarchs (many of them self-important SJWs) probably also do not want to surrender the power they can exert on the populace.

  • A#1 from Emperor of the North (Movie)

    Hey kid you got no class. Hit the bums, kid. Run like the devil. Get a tin can and take up mooching. Knock on back doors for a nickel.

    A no. 1 : Tell them your story. Make 'em weep. You could have been a meat-eater, kid. But you didn't listen to me when I laid it down.

    A no. 1 : Stay off the tracks. Forget it. Its a bum's world for a bum. You'll never be Emperor of the North Pole, kid. You had the juice, kid, but not the heart and they go together. You're all gas
  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @05:30PM (#59020054) Journal

    The fact is, Facebook can never wind up the good guy with all of these efforts to police or combat "fake news".

    As long as people have published things, there have been inaccurate stories, often exaggerated on purpose.

    As a PUBLISHER, the public holds you to certain standards. If you only publish heavily biased/slanted content with an agenda, you quickly get known as that type of news source. If you only publish things you think will be entertaining or sensational, with little regard for how it might affect the people or places you're reporting about? Again, you'll be pigeonholed as a news source that's really only for the shock or entertainment value of reading the outlandish claims (National Enquirer, for example?).

    But as a content distribution platform, your job is just to make the content of OTHERS available, and easy to determine which user(s) said what. Distribution platforms are not supposed to edit the content, and really shouldn't have any legal responsibility for the content either.

    It seems to me we've lost that distinction in recent years, and it's caused everything from demands Facebook censor certain things to sites like Craigslist having to pull down its "Personals" sections.

    Back in the late 1980's and 90's, when I was active in the computer bulletin board system community, those of us running BBS's wrestled with this same issue. Most concluded that from at least the legal standpoint, you were at much greater risk as soon as you made ANY effort to censor some content - because then you set an expectation. You put everyone on alert that you actually WERE reviewing what was posted and had the capability of selectively removing it. By just running the BBS and not touching the content, you had a great argument that you never looked at whatever was objectionable, and you were concentrating on just providing the service of allowing others to publish/share things. Each user was responsible for whatever he or she put there.

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      But as a content distribution platform, your job is just to make the content of OTHERS available... Distribution platforms are not supposed to edit the content...

      Should they be allowed to decide who gets to see which news articles and which advertisements?

    • I think you misunderstand the problem. Facebook is effectively paying people to produce fake or extremist content because it will keep the user "engaged". They also promote content based on how much it "engages" people with little or no regard for its factual basis or the mental health of the viewer. That strongly encourages third parties to pay for the creation of false and misleading material and make it fit the parameters of "engaging". This is so far to the other side of "censoring" that you don't s

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      If you only publish heavily biased/slanted content with an agenda, you quickly get known as that type of news source.

      That's why the people using Facebook to spread their fake news avoid attributing it to themselves. A fake news story or image, with no attribution, spread virally so it's very difficult to trace back to the source. And they don't even care if a few people do, because by then most people have already seen it, had it imprinted in their brain and scrolled on.

      Just making sure that fake news is properly attributed would be a huge improvement.

  • Facebook =/= news (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @05:32PM (#59020074)
    I've posted this sort of thing so many times. Facebook is not news. It is not a news source. It does not even pretend to adhere to journalistic standards. Truth is not mandatory. Facts are not required. It does not employ editors or vet information.

    When you get news from Facebook, you're basically eating from a bucket that you found on the side of the road labeled "food inside: trust me". Maybe it's edible, maybe not, but you're probably an idiot for even considering it.

    As a species, we've been through this before. The ENTIRE field of journalism evolved a clear set of rules, over several CENTURIES, as a way to vet and present high quality information to large numbers of people. Unless an internet sites adheres to journalistic standards, THEY ARE NOT SOURCES OF NEWS. Even if they call some part of their website a "news feed". Facebook isn't the only one guilty of this. But they're one of the big offenders.

    Here's a quick test: Your news source is probably good if is has the following properties:

    1. charges a subscription
    2. clearly and prominently lists biases, philosophical leanings and conflicts of interest
    3. lists the real names of senior editors, journalists and authors
    4. the professional qualifications of said individuals are available to see


    With very, very few exceptions, any good news source will pass this short set of tests. Facebook fails every one of them.
    • by JMZero ( 449047 )

      You're looking at this in a very strange way. You shouldn't be evaluating whether Facebook is a good news source, because it's not really the source at all - it's just the messenger.

      It'd be like saying you can't trust content you find at a supermarket, because the "NEWS" section at the supermarket doesn't have editors. Sure your conservative-run supermarket might only stock right-wing papers or something - so maybe you can't rely on getting all your news at the super market - but your evaluation of the re

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Problem is that the "not news" on Facebook is free to be far more clickbaity and compelling than real news. In comparison to the caricatures and fantasy worlds that fake news presents, real news is boring.

      Look at how popular stories and videos with phrases like "X DESTROYS Y" or "A gets SCHOOLED by B" are.

      People looking for news are often bored rather than hoping to be enlightened. Again, that's why celebrity gossip is so popular.

  • Why would anyone volunteer to adjudicate their users' posts? You'd either have to pay me to do that, or it would have to be about topics that I give enough fucks about to do it for free. Unless there are a lot of ads being sold targeted at Australian users, I wouldn't think Australian politics would be worth Facebook caring about.

    I can't even always be bothered to use my Slashdot mod points, and I mostly like this website. But if I had to work here? Fuck that, I'm not working in my spare time. Put me on th

  • Start with six month terms for the first violation, one year for the second, and max it out at five years in jail for all FB execs after five violations.

    They will suddenly care.

    And don't give them bail during the trials.

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @07:04PM (#59020506) Journal

    A compromise would be to add a heading note, something like:

    "NOTICE: the following item contains false information related to [insert topic] according to [insert gov't agency]. Facebook is not confirming or denying this claim."

    Marking is usually less controversial than outright removal.

  • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Wednesday July 31, 2019 @07:35PM (#59020684)

    but it sounds like one political party is speculating what another party might do if they are elected, and the latter is complaining it's defacto fake news to speculate.

    This is pretty much the normal order of things in elections, and everyday discourse for that matter, throughout the world. Social media can't fix that, there is nothing to fix.

     

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Before social media such claims would have been relayed to the public by journalists and rightly questioned and debunked. The other side would usually be given right of reply too. So while lying was of course common it wasn't nearly as effective as it is now that there is no-one to challenge it.

      The other problem is that we have reached a point where the assumption is that the journalists are lying too. Everyone is lying, everything is fake news. Just decide what you want to be true and believe it, at least

    • but it sounds like one political party is speculating what another party might do if they are elected

      No. This was one political party saying something and another converting it to hyperbole and falsehoods while turning the rhetoric up to 11.

      When the coalition was called out on it they changed their tune saying there's no guarantee that they won't tax inheritance and therefore we aren't lying, which is just fucking stupid.

  • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
    Social media is only passing content between users in some parts of the world.
    Publishing user content other parts of the world?
    Different messages for different nations?
  • "Facebook says it was 'not our role' to remove fake news during Australian election" is a completely different statement than "Facebook has declared it is not 'our role to remove content that one side of a political debate considers to be false'".

    Please put down your pitchforks.

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