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Facebook United States Politics

Facebook Bans Trump From Posting For Remainder of His Term in Office (cnn.com) 345

Facebook will ban President Donald Trump's account from posting for at least the remainder of his term in office and perhaps "indefinitely," CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a blog post on Thursday. From a report: "We believe the risks of allowing the President to continue to use our service during this period are simply too great," Zuckerberg wrote in the post. "Therefore, we are extending the block we have placed on his Facebook and Instagram accounts indefinitely and for at least the next two weeks until the peaceful transition of power is complete." The decision marks a major escalation by Facebook as it and other platforms have come under intense pressure from advocacy groups and prominent figures to ban Trump following his inflammatory rhetoric encouraging insurrection. Facebook and Twitter took the extraordinary step on Wednesday of temporarily locking President Donald Trump's account on their platforms after his supporters stormed the Capitol building to protest the election.
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Facebook Bans Trump From Posting For Remainder of His Term in Office

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  • Seems fair (Score:5, Insightful)

    by memory_register ( 6248354 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @02:15PM (#60907668)
    Peaceful transition of power and all that.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      It is about damn time

    • by Xylantiel ( 177496 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @06:08PM (#60908838)
      Censure all members who voted to not accept the electors until they publicly declare, with no weasel words, that Biden won the election, it was not "stolen" in any way. They are either part of democracy or they are not.
      • They want an investigation into the allegations of a stolen election? Make them each report the facts they know under oath with a threat of perjury. If they have no facts, no further investigation. If they lie under oath, file charges. Some of these loons are lawyers. Lying under oath will have additional professional consequences.

  • by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @02:16PM (#60907674) Homepage Journal
    "we milked this for 5 years, maybe we should cut him off since the new administration is coming in two weeks. Don't want to get section 230'd"
    • I'm.. not sure you understand what section 230 does. One thing it does not do is prevent Facebook or any provider from censoring whatever the fuck they want. You can't be "230'd" unless they end 230 and then there would be even more censorship, though frankly 230 shouldn't be needed as these platforms are clearly platforms and not publishers even without 230 explicitly saying so.
    • by TomGreenhaw ( 929233 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @02:35PM (#60907752)
      I suspect the big tech companies would welcome regulation. Giants like Facebook can afford to comply and their upstart disruptive would be competitors couldn't afford to get off the ground.
    • by ranton ( 36917 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @02:37PM (#60907758)

      "we milked this for 5 years, maybe we should cut him off since the new administration is coming in two weeks. Don't want to get section 230'd"

      I agree it is pathetic, but not because of fear of the new administration. It is a new lack of fear of the current administration.

      This is just doing something they should have a long time ago, but now that Trump won't be in power they have less to fear from reprisal from his administration. Anyone who says yesterday's violent sedition opened their eyes is a liar or an idiot. This has always been the very likely endgame of Trump's style of rhetoric. In a weaker democracy this is what a coup would look like. America is thankfully strong enough to survive Trump. But with 70+ million votes last November it was close.

  • Peer-to-peer (Score:5, Insightful)

    by michaelmalak ( 91262 ) <michael@michaelmalak.com> on Thursday January 07, 2021 @02:20PM (#60907680) Homepage
    No one should have ever left the peer-to-peer technologies of e-mail and UseNet in favor of central servers controlled by private companies.
    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      No one should have ever left the peer-to-peer technologies of e-mail and UseNet in favor of central servers controlled by private companies.

      Peer-to-peer is appropriate for some forms of communications, but for others pub/sub is more appropriate. And that is a lot harder to do in a decentralized manner EG with regards to discoverability.

      • by ranton ( 36917 )

        Peer-to-peer is appropriate for some forms of communications, but for others pub/sub is more appropriate. And that is a lot harder to do in a decentralized manner EG with regards to discoverability.

        I agree it is much harder to build a decentralized system but still provide a level of discoverability which gave Facebook a much better user experience than peer-to-peer technologies of the past. But some hard things are still important to do. I don't have the ambition or vision to successfully do it myself (and have little faith I could finance it) but I hope someone does.

        • I would argue that the most difficult service facebook provides, which would be hard to replace, is the spam filtering functionality. Not an easy problem to solve.

          • by ranton ( 36917 )

            I would argue that the most difficult service facebook provides, which would be hard to replace, is the spam filtering functionality. Not an easy problem to solve.

            Agreed. Discoverability isn't an actual problem if all I meant was providing a way for users to find any content on the network. The problem is giving them a useful feed of information. Filtering out information the client doesn't want, whether it is spam or simply not interesting to them, is the real issue. Some kind of tagging makes categorizing content and matching it to their likes not too hard, so I would say spam filtering is the biggest challenge. As you said.

          • What? Without ad blocking facebook's primary mission is to DELIVER spam to users.

    • No one should have ever left the peer-to-peer technologies of e-mail and UseNet in favor of central servers controlled by private companies.

      If I remember telephone interconnectivity only happened because of regulation (couldn't find a good source on this), so I am wondering whether regulation can help create a decentralised mixed-communication network, that support voice, video and multi-media texts - something without the limitations of SMS and mobile only platforms.

      Quite honestly I don't mind paying a nominal fee if it came with a promise of non-tracking.

    • Hard to maintain a plonk file of 75 million.

  • Way Past Time (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @02:22PM (#60907688) Journal

    He's been making inflammatory comments for years, and now suddenly, when the inevitable happens and a bunch of his wild-eyed cultists bust into the Capitol Building, it's "Oh my, we've got to stop this now!"

    Credibility would have been holding him to account years ago. Shuttering his access less than two weeks until he leaves office is like closing the barn doors after the armed, white nationalist, Confederate flag wielding cows have come home.

    I guess this means Zuck won't be looking at a Congressional run under the Republican banner. The madness yesterday in Washington DC is going to end a few aspirations; including any possible ambition Pence may have of seeking the Republican nomination in 2024. I certainly hope it ends Ivanka Trump's dreams of riding her old man's coattails into Congress, but I guess we'll just have to see how many Always Trumpers are left after the dust settles.

    • I would have liked to have seen him held accountable. Of course if Facebook / Twitter *did* manage to do that and we had avoided the insurrection, there would be people denying that Trump was all that bad and unnecessarily contained. There are still idiots out there who insist that Y2K was a hoax since we managed to successfully avoid it!
    • I guess this means Zuck won't be looking at a Congressional run under the Republican banner.

      He might. Voters have incredibly short memories. "Watch Zuck ride in to save us from the evil socialist."

      There's always a villain.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @02:28PM (#60907724)
    I'm sure this thread will be full of well thought out, reasonable and insightful comments and I wanted some popcorn to enjoy while reading them. No ulterior movtives, honest!
    • What's the matter Radiant, no energy to get in the ring and fight today?

      • Meh, I've had my fun. But this is largely pointless. Trump already conceded. McConnell beat him at every turn for control of the party. Hell he lost those 2 seats in Georgia. He's beaten and will fade away, sucking down just a bit more money in grift from desperate fools donating their last dollar to him.
      • Oh, and mad props for knowing what the "r" in rsilvergun stands for :)
    • Popcorn is nutritious, eat up!

  • Thus far, only a few White House officials, some from the first ladies entourage, and one cabinet member have resigned [msn.com] after the attempted coup by terrorists which was fomented by the con artist. As the article relates, several other cabinet members are preparing to do the same.

    In addition, there is now the suggestion the con artist deliberately put Pence's life in danger [cnn.com] by threatening him to overturn the election and when that didn't happen, refusing to send aid to quell the terrorist attack.

    Pence was joined by his wife Karen Pence, daughter Charlotte and brother, Rep. Greg Pence, R-Indiana, for the ceremonial counting of the electoral votes in Congress Wednesday. Several of the violent Trump supporters who were rampaging the US Capitol were heard screaming "where's Mike Pence," the source said, frightening the vice president and his family.
    . . .
    People close to the vice president now believe he is being set up as a "scapegoat" to shoulder the blame inside Trump-world after Pence refused to buckle to the President's demands to engineer a procedural coup that would keep Trump in power.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Well, it's hard to feel sorry for Pence. He's been the chief enabler of much of Trump's idiocy and villainy. But still, at the end of the day, it's likely he's going to have to have a Secret Service detail for himself and his family for years to come. When the DoJ comes down on any ringleaders with the fires of hell, you'll have the rest start plotting the demise of anyone who the view as responsible for Trump's defeat. That's going to include people like Mitt Romney and Tom Cotton as well, not to mention T

  • Now that he's only got 2 weeks left, I guess Zuck figures there's not much more ad revenue to be had from his posts, so might as well get the good PR from banning him.
  • by Lickety Splitt ( 6769422 ) on Thursday January 07, 2021 @03:08PM (#60907958)
    Have y'all noticed that the social media companies finally found out that it was possible to curb Trumps destructive influence on the same day that it was confirmed that Democrats will be running all the committees that govern them for at least the next two years, probably more considering the seats up for grabs in 2022.
  • The seditionist spent quite a long time discussing and planning online. They should not now be allowed to delete the incriminating comments and threads now that their labors have born fruit.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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