The social media company, which is now called Meta, faces increasing scrutiny over its handling of abuses on its services. Reuters
The social media company, which is now called Meta, faces increasing scrutiny over its handling of abuses on its services. Reuters
The social media company, which is now called Meta, faces increasing scrutiny over its handling of abuses on its services. Reuters
The social media company, which is now called Meta, faces increasing scrutiny over its handling of abuses on its services. Reuters

Facebook critics call for release of human rights review


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Facebook critics on Wednesday called on the world's largest social network to release a human rights impact assessment it commissioned in 2020 to investigate hate speech on its platforms in India.

The social media company, which is now called Meta, faces increasing scrutiny over its handling of abuses on its services, particularly after whistleblower Frances Haugen leaked internal documents showing its struggles monitoring problematic content in countries where it was most likely to cause harm.

In a letter sent to the company this month and made public on Wednesday, rights groups including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and India Civil Watch International urged Facebook to release the report.

Gare Smith, partner and chair of global business and human rights practice at the US law firm Foley Hoag, which Facebook commissioned to carry out the assessment, said: “Such projects are complex, particularly in a country as diverse and large as India.”

Meta's director of human rights policy, Miranda Sissons, said in a statement: “Given the complexity of this work, we want these assessments to be thorough. We will report annually on how we're addressing human rights impacts, in line with our Human Rights Policy.”

In November, rights groups told The Wall Street Journal that the social media company had narrowed the draft report's scope and was delaying the process.

Mr Smith said the firm had “taken numerous steps to ensure the assessment is completed fairly and independently".

Rights groups have for years raised alarms about online hate speech and misinformation stoking tension in India, the company's largest market by number of users.

“As a result of the consistent and continuous barrage of hate on social media, particularly on Facebook, Indian Muslims have been practically dehumanised and rendered helpless and voiceless,” said Dr Zafarul-Islam Khan, a former Chairman of Delhi Minorities Commission, speaking at a press briefing organised by a group of Facebook critics known as the Real Facebook Oversight Board.

The company said last week it would “assess the feasibility” of commissioning an independent human rights assessment into its work in Ethiopia, after its oversight board recommended a review of how its platforms have been used to spread content that heightens the risk of violence there.

Who is Tim-Berners Lee?

Sir Tim Berners-Lee was born in London in a household of mathematicians and computer scientists. Both his mother, Mary Lee, and father, Conway, were early computer scientists who worked on the Ferranti 1 - the world's first commercially-available, general purpose digital computer. Sir Tim studied Physics at the University of Oxford and held a series of roles developing code and building software before moving to Switzerland to work for Cern, the European Particle Physics laboratory. He developed the worldwide web code as a side project in 1989 as a global information-sharing system. After releasing the first web code in 1991, Cern made it open and free for all to use. Sir Tim now campaigns for initiatives to make sure the web remains open and accessible to all.

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Updated: January 19, 2022, 8:49 PM`