Facebook Removes Racist Posts About US Vice President Elect
Facebook has
taken down a string of racist and misogynistic posts, memes and comments about
US Vice-President-Elect Kamala Harris.
The social
network removed the content after BBC News alerted it to three groups that
regularly hosted hateful material on their pages.
Facebook
says it takes down 90% of hate speech before it is flagged.
One media
monitoring body described the pages as "dedicated to propagating racist
and misogynistic smears".
However,
despite the pages being places where hate-speech is regularly directed towards
the vice-president-elect, Facebook said it would not take action on the groups
themselves.
Media
Matters president Angelo Carusone said: "Facebook's removal of this
content only after it's been flagged to them by the media confirms that the
rules and guidelines they establish are hollow because they put little to no
effort into detection and enforcement.
"We are
talking about the lowest of low-hanging fruit from a detection perspective.
"And
yet, these escaped Facebook's notice until flagged by a third party."
The pages
included accusations Ms Harris was not a US citizen - because her mother was
from India and her father from Jamaica.
Other comments
suggested she was not "black enough" for the Democrats.
Another post
said she should be "deported to India".
And, in
several memes, her name is mocked One of the pages has 4,000 members, another
1,200.
A series of
other sexually graphic and misogynistic submissions were also removed.
Facebook has
been repeatedly criticised by advertisers and civil-rights groups for not doing
enough to tackle hate speech.
In August,
hundreds of companies stopped advertising on the platform in protest.
Previously,
other campaigners have told BBC News racism and hate speech is not picked up by
Facebook's internal moderation tools - and in some situations even promoted.
Rishad
Robinson, from the Stop Hate for Profit campaign, told BBC News Facebook had
"created a set of algorithms that incentivise people to spread hate".
Facebook's
own civil-rights audit, in August, said the company had made "vexing
and heartbreaking" decisions about hate speech that represented
"significant setbacks for civil rights".
And last
week, one of Joe Biden's senior aides attacked Facebook over its handling
of conspiracy theories, calls to violence and disinformation in the days
following the US election.
"Our
democracy is on the line," tweeted the US president-elect's deputy press
secretary, Bill Russo.
.

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