Facebook's Trump Ban Upheld By Oversight Board For Now
Donald
Trump's ban from Facebook and Instagram has been upheld by Facebook's Oversight
Board.
But it
criticised the permanent nature of the ban as beyond the scope of Facebook's
normal penalties.
It has
ordered Facebook to review the decision and "justify a proportionate
response" that is applied to everyone, including ordinary users.
The former
president was banned from both sites in January following the Capitol Hill
riots.
The
Oversight Board said the initial decision to permanently suspend Mr Trump was
"indeterminate and standardless", and that the correct response
should be "consistent with the rules that are applied to other users of
its platform".
Facebook
must respond within six months, it said.
At a press
conference, co-chair Helle Thorning-Schmidt admitted: "We did not have an
easy answer."
She added
that she felt Facebook would "appreciate the decision".
"We are
telling Facebook to go back and be more transparent about how it assesses these
things. Treat all users the same and don't give arbitrary penalties."
In response,
Facebook said it would "consider the board's decision and determine an
action that is clear and proportionate".
The board
also made a number of recommendations about how Facebook should improve its
policies and the social network promised to "carefully review" these.
The Board
was due to announce its decision last month but delayed the ruling in order to
review more than 9,000 public responses to cases, it said.
In the
meantime, Mr Trump, who is also banned from Twitter, launched a new
website on Tuesday to update supporters with his thoughts.
In a post
published following the Facebook ruling, he once again claimed there had been
fraud in the 2020 Presidential Election, and encouraged his supporters to
"never give up".
The ruling
means that Mr Trump's suspension remains in place for now.
The
Oversight Board decided that Mr Trump had broken Facebook's community
standards, and upheld the ban.
But it is
the "indefinite" part of the ban that it took issue with because that
is not within its own rules.
"It is
not permissible for Facebook to keep a user off the platform for an undefined
period, with no criteria for when or whether the account will be
restored," it said in a statement.
Applying
that type of ban to Mr Trump was not following any clear procedure, it said.
The Board
argued that Facebook had essentially issued "a vague, standardless penalty
and then [referred] this case to the Board to resolve".
It said
doing so meant "Facebook seeks to avoid its responsibilities" - and
sent the decision back to Facebook.
Co-chair
Michael McConnell justified the timeframe saying that it was a decision
"not to be rushed" and admitted that the firm may decide to throw it
back to the Oversight Board yet again.
Setting up a
"Supreme Court" to rule on tricky issues seemed like a smart move by
Mark Zuckerberg. Whatever the Oversight Board decided, Facebook's boss could
say "not my fault, blame the judges".
But that's
unlikely to wash here. There can be no more divisive issue than President
Trump's presence on a platform credited or blamed by many for his electoral
success in 2016 and probably crucial if he decides to run again in 2024.
Now, the
Oversight Board has thrown the hot potato right back into Mr Zuckerberg's lap.
He and his
team have been told to go away and have a long hard think about how they handle
tricky cases like this one. They will have to decide the meaning of the term
"newsworthy" and conduct a proper inquest into the platform's role in
the events of 6 January.
And at the
end of it all, Facebook will still have to decide what to do about Donald
Trump.
Mark
Zuckerberg could be forgiven for wondering whether setting up this body was
such a good idea after all - and why he is paying the generous salaries of the
board's members.
Often
referred to as "Facebook's Supreme Court", it was set up to rule on
difficult or controversial moderation decisions made by Facebook.
It was
established by Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg but operates as an independent
entity, although its wages and other costs are covered by Facebook. It is made
up of journalists, human rights activists, lawyers and academics.
Following
the Capitol Hill riots on 6 January, Facebook announced it was banning Mr Trump
for breaking its "glorification of violence" rules.
Hundreds of
his supporters entered the complex as the US Congress attempted to certify Joe
Biden's victory in last year's presidential election.
Mr Trump was
acquitted of a charge of inciting insurrection at the US Capitol in his second
impeachment trial in February, after being accused of encouraging the violence
in which five people lost their lives.
The social
network had originally imposed a 24-hour ban after the attack which was then
extended "indefinitely".
Mr
Zuckerberg announced that the risks of allowing Mr Trump to post were
"simply too great".
The former
president has also been banned from Twitter and YouTube.

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