Here's what Facebook employees are saying about Zuckerberg's decision not to remove Trump's threats of violence
If we fail the test case here, history will not judge us kindly."
Leaked internal Facebook posts reveal that Facebook employees are horrified that Mark Zuckerberg and C-suite executives refuse to remove impeached president Donald Trump's threats of violence.
Casey Newton at The Verge:
I have to say I am finding the contortions we have to go through incredibly hard to stomach," one employee wrote in a comment about the shooting post. All this points to a very high risk of a violent escalation and civil unrest in November and if we fail the test case here, history will not judge us kindly."
On Tuesday Twitter labeled two tweets about mail-in voting as potentially misleading" for suggesting the practice would lead to a rigged election. Early Friday morning, Twitter placed another tweet behind an interstitial warning for glorifying violence" because it included the sentence when the looting starts, the shooting starts." In all cases, the tweets were cross-posted to Facebook.
(...)But then Trump cross-posted to Facebook a tweet that seemed to suggest that violent action be taken against people protesting the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minnesota police. Would it be possible to explain in more detail the interpretation of our community standards?" one employee asked. Does this post violate them but get an exemption, or is it not violating?"
But by mid-afternoon Pacific time on Friday, employees had not received a response - and they were beginning to grow frustrated. It's egregious that nobody from policy has chimed in or provided any sort of context here," one employee said. When another employee defended Facebook's silence by suggesting that top executives were likely debating their next steps, the original poster replied: They've already made an official decision by keeping the post up after it's been reported. They should communicate their justification for the decision."
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Leaked posts show Facebook employees asking the company to remove Trump's threat of violence