I’ve been writing this blog since March 2011. I’ve written over 1400 posts. I never got censored—until last month, when my December 7 post was taken down by Blogger. It was about the House report on the response to that illness I guess I’m not supposed to talk about, even though I was referring to the findings of a government committee (and even though I had literally written freely on the issue dozens of times since 2020).
For many years I have followed up my posts here with a post
on Facebook linking to it, to make it more convenient for friends to find what
I’ve written.
I had a sense I’d been shadow banned a couple of times on
Facebook, but no way to prove it. I don’t spend a lot of time (any) trying to
get engagement, so if there’s less, I could hardly tell. Sometimes those little
notices showed up, warning people about possible misinformation, with a link to
some “trusted” source—which, as a result of that House report, we now know was actually
a link to propagandistic misinformation. But Facebook had never given me a
warning or taken down a post. Until last Friday.
I wrote about the enumerated powers in the US Constitution.
I’ve written about that a number of times before. Talking about what’s in the
Constitution seems pretty safe from violating “community standards.” I posted
late in the evening on January 2. Facebook immediately removed it and told me I
had violated community standards. They didn’t say what specifically I had done.
I clicked, to see if they would tell me more, before I had taken a screenshot,
which I regret. I was just so surprised. So I may have missed a clue.
I protested that I had not violated community standards and
asked for a review. They said they would get back to me, and that usually takes
4 days, but could be longer. Today makes a full week. There is no word. There
is no way, that I have discovered, to find out anything about the post. My account has
no strikes against it and is in good standing, it appears.
I have read through the community standards. I cannot find
anything that I may have violated, even inadvertently.
One thing I have noticed, just the past month or two, is a
change in other accounts on Facebook that link to outside content. I
first noticed it with Dinesh D’Souza, and later with various people from the Daily
Wire—Matt Walsh, Michael Knowles. I’m sure there are others doing it.
(Maybe everyone else got a memo that I didn’t.) They make a statement, just
words on a colored background. And you have to click on comments to get a link
to the linked material. I find this really annoying. You can’t even get the
title of what is being linked to until you go to the comments, so you don’t
know if it’s worth it. Sometimes you don’t get a full idea of what the content
is about until you click through to the actual linked article, which is only
worth it if you really trust the source and seek more of their content.
I see no advantage to the content provider—unless it is to
avoid some obscure (unfindable) Facebook rule about linking to somewhere beyond
Facebook. One would think that, when you’re on another platform, and it asks
you if you want to share, and Facebook comes up as one of the buttons to make
that easy, that it would mean Facebook is good with sharing such content,
assuming it doesn’t violate their other community standards, many of which are
reasonable to avoid theft, fraud, libel, child exploitation, and other actual
crimes.
Ironically, Mark Zuckerberg announced just this week, Tuesday, January 7, that they are removing their fact checkers, and letting go of the whole censorship gig they’ve been providing for the current regime. He doesn’t sound like he’s crazy, or lying. I guess we'll see.
Mark Zuckerberg makes announcement about changes to Facebook. Screenshot from here. |
Here are the things he listed that Facebook/Meta is going to
do:
1. Remove fact checkers; replace them with
Community Notes, similar to X. [I found a description of Community Notes here.]
2. Simplify content policies; get rid of
restrictions on topics like immigration and gender that are out of touch with
mainstream discourse.
3. Change enforcement policies; no longer filter
for any and all policy violations; focus on illegal and high severity
violations; no action on lower severity violations until someone reports an
issue.
4. Bring back civic content; this means political
content can be recommended again, because people are ready to see this content
again. [I’d like to say more about this overt censorship, which he seems
comfortable with doing, based on their subjective sense of what people want to
see, but maybe I’ll save that for another time.]
5. Move US-based content review to Texas, rather
than in California, where bias has been an issue. [The next day there was a
surprise announcement to PolitiFact that Facebook would no longer be using them; that means huge layoffs for them.
I’m not particularly sad for them.]
6. Work with President Trump to push back on
pressure to censor in other countries. While the US is the most pro-free-speech
nation, with the Biden administration pushing for more censorship, other
countries have been emboldened. There’s hope for support from Trump.
I guess things will be phased in. As of today, the community standards still say you can’t say anything against any kind of jab, because they want to uphold their certain beliefs (which, as I said, Facebook never actually censored me for; only Blogger, a Google platform, did that). I don't know about other topics.
I did a little research, to see if censoring linked content
was a thing. Linked content is a problem. Facebook, and for that matter pretty much any platform, wants users to stay on
the platform. But their practice has been to demote the content, with an
algorithm, so it gets seen by fewer people. Not surprising, actually. Facebook
has taken that further by sometimes adding a warning, such as, “Are you sure you want to follow this link?” as though wherever you’re
going might be a threat to your computer safety. (It tends to work; many people
see that and think, “I don’t want to risk it.”) But I didn’t find anything to
say that they actually removed your content for having an external link in it.
Putting the link in the comments is indeed a way to “hide”
the external link. And I think that will have to be what I do in the future.
However, the drawback is that phone users have a harder time accessing the
comments. So it’s a tradeoff: use a link and get fewer views (or in my case,
get the post removed entirely), or put the link in comments and make it harder
for people to view it.
If I’m wrong and my “violation” wasn’t the external link,
but was content related, I don’t know how to solve that. Do they really find a
discussion of the enumerated powers of the Constitution a risk to public
safety? It may be that fact checkers actually do believe that.
In case you read here regularly, in late October I wrote a piece about the death throes of the "propaganda beast." I got censored after that, on two platforms that had not censored me before. So was I wrong? I don't think so. I think this is just part of the thrashing out of a cornered, dying beast.
There’s a fact checker (not used by Facebook) that I actually refer to frequently, called JustFacts. They back up what they say with data and, well, just facts. (As a result, they do appear to lean conservative.) Yesterday’s (January 9th) email included a response to the Mark Zuckerberg news, with links to 21 fact checker fails. I’ll include that portion of their email below, along with the links:
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has announced that Facebook is “going to get rid of fact checkers” because they have “been too politically biased and have destroyed more trust than they created.”
For years, Just Facts has been
documenting that Facebook-approved fact checkers like PolitiFact have
incessantly spread falsehoods that support left-wing agendas. Here’s 21 glaring
examples and the actual facts that refute them:
3) Biden’s role in the murder of
Laken Riley
4) Income taxes paid by illegal
immigrants
8) Effects of the federal “assault
weapons” ban
9) Democrat Party’s role in the Ku
Klux Klan
10) Impact of Obamacare on Medicare
11) Tax rates paid by the wealthy
13) Obama’s withdrawal from Iraq
14) Arming teachers
15) Pace of illegal immigration
16) Crime rates of illegal
immigrants
18) Antifa’s role in the Capitol
Hill riot
19) Illegal voting by non-citizens
21) The “bipartisan” border security
bill