Meta asks Oversight Board for guidance on Covid-19 misinformation policy

27 July 2022, 13:54

A woman’s finger pressing a key on a laptop keyboard
BNPL figures. Picture: PA

The social media giant has asked its Oversight Board to advise on whether its current Covid misinformation policy is ‘still appropriate’.

Facebook parent company Meta has asked its Oversight Board to advise on whether its current Covid-19 misinformation policy is still appropriate now that it says the pandemic’s status has “evolved”.

Sir Nick Clegg, Meta’s president of global affairs, said the company wanted guidance on whether its broad measures to remove misinformation linked to the virus that were introduced in the early days of the pandemic were still relevant and proportionate as many places “seek to return to more normal life”.

The Oversight Board was set up in 2020 and is able to make binding decisions about Facebook’s content removal actions and policies, even overruling the platform and executives.

The former Liberal Democrat leader and deputy prime minister said the tighter measures to stop the spread of misinformation were vital earlier in the Covid-19 outbreak, but the social networking firm felt the time was now right to ask whether it “remains the right approach for the months and years ahead”.

“The world has changed considerably since 2020,” Sir Nick wrote in a blog post, adding that a number of countries had high vaccination rates, while online tools and resources to identify and remove misinformation, as well as educate people on its dangers, were now widespread.

But he acknowledged that this was not the case everywhere, and the company now wanted guidance on how to best approach keeping people safe from harmful content while still protecting freedom of expression.

“It is important that any policy Meta implements be appropriate for the full range of circumstances countries find themselves in,” he said.

“Meta is fundamentally committed to free expression and we believe our apps are an important way for people to make their voices heard.

“But some misinformation can lead to an imminent risk of physical harm, and we have a responsibility not to let this content proliferate. The policies in our Community Standards seek to protect free expression while preventing this dangerous content.

“But resolving the inherent tensions between free expression and safety isn’t easy, especially when confronted with unprecedented and fast-moving challenges, as we have been in the pandemic.

“That’s why we are seeking the advice of the Oversight Board in this case. Its guidance will also help us respond to future public health emergencies.”

However, online safety campaigners have accused Meta of trying to deflect from what they said was a failure to prevent large amounts of misinformation to be spread during the pandemic.

Callum Hood, head of research at the Centre for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), said: “This move is designed to distract from Meta’s failure to act on a flood of anti-vaccine conspiracy theories spread by opportunistic liars during the pandemic – many of whom made millions of dollars by exploiting social media’s massive audience and algorithmic amplification.

“CCDH’s research, as well as Meta’s own internal analysis, shows that the majority of anti-vaccine misinformation originates from a tiny number of highly prolific bad actors.

“But Meta has failed to act on key figures who are still reaching millions of followers on Facebook and Instagram.

“Platforms like Meta should not have absolute power over life-and-death issues like this that affect billions of people. It’s time people in the UK and elsewhere are given democratic oversight of life-changing decisions made thousands of miles away in Silicon Valley.”

Sir Nick said Meta’s policies had helped remove Covid-19 misinformation on an “unprecedented scale”, saying more than 25 million pieces of content had been removed globally since the start of the pandemic.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Getting accurate information online is "under greater threat than ever before".

Accurate information online ‘under greater threat than ever’ as misinformation 'crisis' looms

A hand on a keyboard

Council cannot say when computer system will be fully restored after cyberattack

US President Donald Trump

US-China tariff deal helps tech firms but they ‘remain in Trump’s crosshairs’

European moose, (Alces alces), Markaryd, Sweden. A majestic elk in the forests of the land of a thousand lakes. Autumn forest in the wilderness. Beaut

Elk could return to UK after 3,000 years in new rewilding effort

A total of 28 toadlets have been counted at Blackmoor, Hampshire, following the reintroduction programme which started in 2021.

Britain’s loudest amphibian makes ‘remarkable comeback’, after project that could be ‘blueprint’ for conservation efforts

A hand on a keyboard

Thousands of pupils attend school on Saturday after online phishing attack

x

Part of Soviet-era spacecraft to crash to Earth this weekend

Schoolgirls in class

Phishing attack sees Edinburgh pupils locked out of online learning materials

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer with Commanding Officer Matthew Teare

Starmer declines to rule out tech tax changes as part of future trade deal

Lunar samples at the Shanghai Expo Trade Center in Shanghai, China

First moon rocks on Earth since 1976 arrive safely in UK

Scientists have revealed that mother wasps can remember the locations of up to nine separate nests at once, rarely making mistakes despite the fact nests are dug in bare sand containing hundreds belonging to other females.

Incredible new research reveals the power of a mother wasp's brain

Government cyber defences have not kept up with the dangerous and evolving threats from hackers, a report from MPs has warned.

Government cyber defences not prepared for evolving threat from ‘hostile states’ and hackers, MPs warn

Close up photo of young woman sitting at wooden table using mobile phone

Schoolgirls in Wales report problematic social media use double that of boys

A woman’s hand pressing keys of a laptop keyboard

‘Crumbling’ Government cyber defences outpaced by cyber criminals – report

The Wikimedia Foundation said it was launching a legal challenge against the thresholds of the Act

Wikipedia launches legal challenge against Online Safety Act

GP surgery filing shelves

Digitising NHS and adult social care ‘will cost £21bn over the next five years’