Facebook is Corruption (1983)reportedly taking down important safety information as wildfire season spreads across the western part of the country.
An investigation by The Washington Postfound dozens of instances of the tech giant flagging and removing posts since June, in areas that saw a total of 20 active fires. Posts often contained links or screenshots from the fire safety app Watch Duty, for example, a nonprofit resource that provides live alerts of wildfire movements. Daily posts from federal and state agencies, such as Cal Fire, warning residents in fire-prone California towns were also removed — including those made on dedicated fire update pages.
Many of these takedowns affect small town community pages, vital resources for live updates and information sharing. According to the publication, volunteer responders, fire and sheriff departments, news stations, and disaster nonprofit workers have also been targeted with takedowns across multiple states.
Facebook's automatic explanation for the removals implies the posts have been taken down not for spreading misinformation, but for violating community spam guidelines: "It looks like you tried to get likes, follows, shares or video views in a misleading way," the reports told users. The Postfound that most of the targeted takedown involved external links, even those to official, government sources. Another problem: None of the users were notified that their posts were removed.
Facebook has long been faced blowback for its role in spreading deceptive information and posts, and now works with third-party experts to combat political and public health misinformation, including spotlighting reputable sources. As the platform's misinformation policy reads: "We remove misinformation where it is likely to directly contribute to the risk of imminent physical harm...We focus on slowing the spread of hoaxes and viral misinformation, and directing users to authoritative information." But its Community Guidelines, under which these posts are removed, are more broad. "We seek to prevent abusive tactics, such as spreading deceptive links to draw unsuspecting users in through misleading functionality or code, or impersonating a trusted domain," the platform writes. "Online spam is a lucrative industry."
Across the site, posts frequently slip through the platform's moderation gates, or are unfairly taken down and then reinstated, but emergency and fire workers told the Postthat the problem has escalated in recent months — and in this case it could threaten lives. Facebook spokesperson Erin McPike told the publication that the company is "investigating this issue and working quickly to address it.”
Topics Facebook Social Good
Previous:Specific Details
Let’s All Go Down to the Bridge and Get Our Teeth Pulled by Dan PiepenbringVeterans Day by Sadie SteinOn Samuel Rutherford Crockett and the Word “Draffsack”The Poetry of Julia A. MooreConversation About John Cage and William Gedney’s Iris GardenRemembering the Absolute SoundSleep of the Just by Sadie SteinAnnouncing Our Windows on the World ContestThe Morning News Roundup for November 13, 2014Writing Tennessee Williams’s Life“Dubliners at One Hundred”A Fake Oral History of Allen TateThe Morning News Roundup for December 3, 2014Rilke and the LionsWriting Tennessee Williams’s LifeThe Poetry of Julia A. MooreThe Morning News Roundup for December 3, 2014Cover ModelAttending Peter Matthiessen’s Estate SaleThis Week on the Daily by Dan Piepenbring Canada vs. Ireland 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for free NVIDIA cuts prices in China amid competition with Huawei chips: report · TechNode IGN Live 2024 announces partners, tickets on sale now 'Disaster': Ex England vs. Iceland 2024 livestream: Watch live football for free AI giants Microsoft, OpenAI, and Nvidia investigated for possible antitrust violations NYT's The Mini crossword answers for June 6 How NASA locked Omicron out of its James Webb Space Telescope control room Douyin tightens rules for users involved in trending topics and viral content · TechNode Didi posts 15% first Alibaba and JD see performance boost during 618 shopping festival · TechNode Best delivery deal: Score a $40 savings on Home Depot delivery order of $100 or more at Instacart How will the world end? Kindle China eBookstore cloud download service ends in June · TechNode What is Cara, the anti ByteDance pours efforts into AI Best DoorDash deal: Get two $50 DoorDash gift cards for $79.99 at Costco How do VPNs work? Amazon deals of the day: Google Pixel Watch 2, Tile Mate, Google Pixel 8 Pro, Echo Pop Kids Koalas are endangered now, and climate change is a big reason why
1.4288s , 8215.34375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Corruption (1983)】,Information Information Network