Facebook has blocked news channel RT from posting video or news content on its page. The ban will remain in place until after the inauguration of Donald Trump as US President.
Details of the ban
Facebook placed the ban on RT during coverage of President Obama’s final press conference. RT confirmed the ban:
Ivor Crotty, Head of Social Media at RT, said:
the live-rights strike seems to be part of an algorithmic failure to acknowledge rights acquired by broadcasters, and we hope it will be resolved in the short term…
While Facebook is a powerful distributor of live-streams it is struggling with the rights ramifications. RT will continue text-only posts to Facebook until the issue is resolved.
RT stated that it had received no direct communication from Facebook on the matter. The news channel did share what it claims are messages between its team and the manager of the News, Media and Publishing on its Facebook group.
Facebook decisions
The decision comes at a time of rising tensions between the West and Russia. It also occurs in a context of seemingly arbitrary and asymmetric bans by the social media giant.
Far-right group Britain First this week issued a video in which its leader Paul Golding called on supporters to take vengeance on named targets in politics and the media. His message to all politicians and journalists who opposed his ideology was:
I can promise you all, from the depths of my being, that you will all meet your miserable end at the hands of the Britain First movement. Every last one of you.
Despite clear threats of violence against named civilian targets, the video remains in place. Facebook has refused requests for its removal, claiming the video does not contravene community standards.
Meanwhile, the social media site has blocked everything from images of breastfeeding mothers to the iconic ‘napalm girl’ image which captured the horrors of the Vietnam war. With the social media site becoming the most powerful distribution network of independent news, greater transparency over decisions is in ever higher demand.
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