By Tyler Durden
As the most unprecedented purge in recent US history continues, shortly after AirBNB announced that it would ban guests associated with hate groups (it was unclear how Airbnb will determine who is and isn’t associated with a “hate group”, although Airbnb was kind enough to inform its clients that it “already runs background checks on all U.S. users when they first begin using the platform”), on Monday Facebook announced that it was removing all content mentioning âstop the steal,â a popular phrase among supporters of Trumpâs claims that the election was rigged.
The latest crackdown comes amid a raft of emergency measures to stem what Facebook has called are incitements to violence on its platform in the lead up to President-elect Joe Bidenâs inauguration. If only Facebook was as diligent in stopping the spread of incitement to violence in the lead up to this summer and fall’s pervasive BLM protests and Antifa riots, it probably would have avoided much of the resulting accusations of political and ideological bias that have emerged in recent days.
The full Facebook statement is below:
Our Preparations Ahead of Inauguration Day
By Guy Rosen, VP Integrity, and Monika Bickert, VP Global Policy Management
We began preparing for Inauguration Day last year. But our planning took on new urgency after last weekâs violence in Washington, D.C., and we are treating the next two weeks as a major civic event. Weâre taking additional steps and using the same teams and technologies we used during the general election to stop misinformation and content that could incite further violence during these next few weeks.
We are now removing content containing the phrase âstop the stealâ under our Coordinating Harm policy from Facebook and Instagram. We removed the original Stop the Steal group in November and have continued to remove Pages, groups and events that violate any of our policies, including calls for violence. Weâve been allowing robust conversations related to the election outcome and that will continue. But with continued attempts to organize events against the outcome of the US presidential election that can lead to violence, and use of the term by those involved in Wednesdayâs violence in DC, weâre taking this additional step in the lead up to the inauguration. It may take some time to scale up our enforcement of this new step but we have already removed a significant number of posts.
Our teams are working 24/7 to enforce our policies around the inauguration. We will keep our Integrity Operations Center operating at least through January 22 to monitor and respond to threats in real time. We already had it active ahead of Georgiaâs runoff elections and Congressâs counting of the Electoral College votes in the US presidential election. We extended it due to the violence at the Capitol last week.
As was the case through the 2020 elections, weâve continued to proactively reach out to federal and local law enforcement and we are providing information in response to valid legal requests. As always, we will continue to remove content, disable accounts and work with law enforcement when there is a risk of physical harm or direct threats to public safety.
In addition to the indefinite suspension of President Trumpâs account that we announced on January 7, weâre keeping our pause in place on all ads in the US about politics or elections. This means that we arenât allowing any ads from politicians, including President Trump.
We are also connecting people with reliable information and high-quality news about the inauguration and the transition process. After the inauguration, our label on posts that attempt to delegitimize the election results will reflect that Joe Biden is the sitting president. Our Voting Information Center will stay active on Facebook and Instagram through the inauguration so it can continue to help people find reliable information and updates about the electoral process.
During inauguration week, we will add a news digest to Facebook News as a curated place for people to find reliable news about the inauguration. This will include live video of the inauguration at the US Capitol on January 20. Facebook News often includes news digests dedicated to events of national or global significance, such as âCOVID-19â or âUnrest in Americaâ with stories selected by the curation team. There will also be curated live video of the inauguration and other major moments on Facebook Watch.
Weâve had emergency measures in place since before the US elections such as not recommending civic groups for people to join. Last week, we implemented several additional ones, including increasing the requirement of Group admins to review and approve posts before they can go up, automatically disabling comments on posts in Groups that start to have a high rate of hate speech or content that incites violence, and using AI to further demote content that likely violates our policies. Weâre keeping these measures in place.
We will stay vigilant to additional threats and take further action if necessary to keep people safe and informed.
Now that the censorship and crackdown of discrete words and phrases has officially begun, we wait to see what phrase will be deemed “too violent” next and is deleted out of existence.