Facebook to stop exempting politicians from censorship, building on Trump ban

Politicians may soon lose the special status protecting them from fact-checking and censorship on Facebook, according to reports about upcoming policy changes at Mark Zuckerberg’s social media behemoth.

Facebook – which also owns Instagram and WhatsApp – will treat accounts of politicians and public figures just like everyone else’s, and disclose when a special newsworthiness exemption is invoked to shield them from having “violating” content deleted, The Verge reported on Thursday.

It cited â€śtwo people familiar with the changes.” Facebook declined to comment on the story and has not announced any changes on its official pages. According to the outlet, the official announcement may come â€śas soon as Friday.”

The changes are reportedly driven by last month’s report by the Oversight Board, a body of â€śexperts” Zuckerberg set up to act like a “supreme court” of sorts for the platform. While the board upheld Facebook’s suspension of US President Donald Trump after the January 6 Capitol riot – while he was still in office – they said the rules should apply to everyone equally.

Trump’s indefinite suspension was an “indeterminate and standardless penalty,” the board said, reminding Facebook that its normal practices are to either remove the “violating content,” impose a time-limited suspension, or permanently ban the user.

The board also gave Facebook until June 5 to respond to policy recommendations, a deadline that expires on Saturday.

Another rumored change involves notifying users when they get a â€śstrike” for violating Facebook’s content rules, meaning people will at least get some notice before their accounts were deleted – even if that doesn’t help them to avoid bans or censorship in practice. 

The reported changes were met with approval from NBC’s “disinformation” reporter Ben Collins, who argued that “transparency cuts off a lot of conspiracy theories and at least some claims of bias at the knees.”

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