By SJ
Otto
Is
there a difference between weeding out fake news sites and just plain
censorship? This question needs to come up as Facebook and Twitter are doing
what they call "weeding out" sites they believe are providing fake
news, mostly from Iran and Russia. As Facebook said on its
own blog:
"Today we removed multiple Pages, groups
and accounts for coordinated inauthentic behavior on Facebook and Instagram. Some
of this activity originated in Iran ,
and some originated in Russia .
These were distinct campaigns and we have not identified any link or
coordination between them. However, they used similar tactics by creating
networks of accounts to mislead others about who they were and what they were
doing."
Those
two countries are presently at odds with the US government and its foreign
policy. It is convenient for the US government that these two
countries just happen to be the targets of Facebook's investigation.
A
major question might be: "How do we tell if a site is deliberately posting
miss-information or is it at odds with our foreign policy?"
What
is the difference between a bad opinion and deliberate miss-information? That
also leads to other questions, such as "who has a right to their opinion
on Facebook?" There are all kinds of pages and sites to display opinions
from the far left to the far right. There are several Marxist pages. But
Facebook has a policy against any kind of hate speech. That seems to allow them
to close down pages by Nazis, little doubt because such sites are anti-semitic.
I'm
rather amazed that they have allowed the page Democratic
Kampuchea-កម្ពុជាប្រជាធិបតេយ្យ. The page has been in
Facebook for several years. But we have to wonder how long it will stay?
Just
recently Facebook took down accounts of generals and other military leaders
from Myanmar , over their opinions
defending their regime over charges that they have violated human rights.
According
to The
Washington Post:
"For the next 24 hours, officials went back and
forth on how to respond to the report’s call for Myanmar’s commander in
chief — an active Facebook user — to be investigated and
prosecuted for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes against the
country’s Rohingya Muslim minority.
Without
consulting the Myanmar
government, Facebook on Monday removed Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing’s page from
its platform, along with those of other top military brass, and preemptively
banned others. The U.N. report “put a deadline on what they were planning on
doing anyway,” the person, who was not authorized to talk to the media, added."
The
problem here is that these military leaders are not doing anything different
from other Facebook members. They posted their opinions. They may be wrong in
their opinions. What ever they did they have done nothing different from anyone
who post an opinion on Facebook. Violating human rights is a serious crime. But
writing an opinion on it is not. It may be repugnant to write such opinions.
This may seem as if this is a black and white issue. Myanmar ’s military is committing
war crimes. No one I know supports Myanmar 's military in its
participation of war crimes. But maybe it is in all our interest to hear what Myanmar 's
military leaders have to say about those war crimes. Every person has a right
to a fair trial. That is what we have been told our democratic principles have
always stood for. That is what we say, as if we really believe it. But if we
follow Facebook principles, certain governments and people are not allowed the
right to defend themselves when they are accused of wrong doing. With such
rules we are devoid of democratic principles.
Today
our modern foreign policy principles seem to reflect the Facebook principles. The
right to fair trials, in the court of public opinion, are not automatic. Some
people and institutions have been cut out of the loop. Judgment has already
been decided and there is no appeal process. The leading institutions have been
prejudged. People, governments and various institutions have already been
judged as guilty. It's a lot like fascism. In fact it is fascism.
Institutions,
such as Facebook and Twitter
are near monopolies. There are no real institutions as them, to go to if a
person is displeased with them. They are like a government established medium.
They act as one government institution, even though they are private. They
represent an institution that acts as a branch of the news media. They have
great power. They have the ability to create a great establishment of public
opinion. As individuals we need to stand up to them and oppose their use of
censorship. As time goes on, some of our own blogs and similar institutions
stand in danger of being censored, blocked and shut down by these private
institutions.
We need to stand up for our rights now before it is too late. Let's
oppose censorship!
Pix
by OffGuardian.
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