Facebook to
allow more graphic news
SAN
FRANCISCO: Facebook on Friday (Oct 21) said that it will begin allowing more
graphic or potentially disturbing newsworthy posts to be shared at the
leading online social network.
"We're
going to begin allowing more items that people find newsworthy, significant,
or important to public interest - even if they might otherwise violate our
standards," Facebook vice presidents Joel Kaplan and Justin Osofsky said
in a blog post.
They
explained that they were working with the social network's community and
partners on how exactly to recalibrate standards regarding which posts are
deemed too offensive to allow.
"Our
intent is to allow more images and stories without posing safety risks or
showing graphic images to minors and others who do not want to see
them," Kaplan and Osofsky said.
Facebook has
become a major platform for sharing news stories, and that has come with
criticism for censoring some content despite it having historical or
editorial value.
The
California-based social network on Friday apologised for taking down a breast
cancer awareness video because the images were flagged as offensive, saying
the move was "an error".
Swedish
cancer charity Cancerfonden had put out word that its video explaining to
women how to check for suspicious lumps, featuring animated figures of women
with circle-shaped breasts, had been removed from Facebook.
"We
find it incomprehensible and strange how one can perceive medical information
as offensive," Cancerfonden communications director Lena Biornstad told
AFP. "This is information that saves lives."
Facebook
faced outrage in September for repeatedly deleting a historic Vietnam War
photo included in a post by Norway's Prime Minister Erna Solberg.
It said the
iconic photo of a naked Vietnamese girl fleeing a napalm bombing violated its
rules, but it later backtracked on the decision.
Facebook has
a ban on posts that contain nudity, with some exceptions, such as images of
works of art and women breastfeeding, or educational content. The social
network also bans posts inciting violence or hate.
The Wall
Street Journal on Friday reported that some Facebook employees lobbied at the
social network to have some posts by US presidential candidate Donald Trump -
such as those calling for a ban on Muslim immigration - branded hate speech
and removed.
Chief
executive Mark Zuckerberg rejected the request on the grounds it would amount
to censoring a political candidate, according to the Journal.
Facebook
boasts having some 1.7 billion users around the world.
AFP
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Chủ Nhật, 23 tháng 10, 2016
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