Case Description
These cases concern three content decisions made by Meta, one each on Instagram, Threads and Facebook, which the Oversight Board intends to address together. For each case, the Board will decide whether the content should be allowed on the relevant platform.
The first case involves a user’s reply to a comment on a Threads post from January 2024. The post was a video discussing the Israel-Hamas conflict. The reply says “genocide” and states that “all Israelis are criminals.” In this case, one of Meta’s automated tools (specifically, a hostile speech classifier) identified the content as potentially violating. Following human review, Meta determined the content violated its Hate Speech Community Standard and removed it. Meta’s policy subject matter experts then also determined the original decision to remove the content was correct, after the company identified this case as one to refer to the Board.
The second case involves a Facebook post in Arabic from December 2023, which states that both Russians and Americans are “criminals.” The content also states that “Americans are more honorable” because they “admit their crimes” while Russians “want to benefit from the crimes of the Americans.” After one of Meta’s automated tools (a hostile speech classifier) identified the content as potentially violating, the post was sent for review but this was automatically closed, so it remained on Facebook. In March 2024, Meta selected this content to be referred to the Board and the company’s policy subject matter experts determined the post violated the Hate Speech Community Standard. It was then removed from Facebook. The user who posted the content appealed this decision. Following another stage of human review, the company decided content removal in this case was correct.
The third case involves a user’s comment on an Instagram post from March 2024, stating that “all Indians are rapists.” Meta removed the content after one of Meta’s automated tools (a hostile speech classifier) identified it as potentially violating the Hate Speech Community Standard. The user did not appeal Meta’s decision. After Meta selected this content to refer to the Board, the company’s policy subject matter experts determined the original decision to remove the content was still correct.
Meta removed the content in all three cases. In the first case, Meta did not apply a standard strike to the user’s account as the latter had had another piece of content removed around the same time. Meta explained that when the company removes multiple pieces of content at once, they may count these as a single strike. In the second case, Meta did not apply a standard strike to the user’s account as the content was posted more than 90 days before an enforcement action was taken, as per Meta’s strikes policy. In the third case, the company applied a standard strike and a 24-hour feature limit to the user’s account, which prevented them from using Live video.
Meta’s Hate Speech Community Standard distinguishes between attacks against concepts or institutions, which are generally allowed, and direct attacks against people on the basis of protected characteristics, including race, ethnicity, national origin and religious affiliation. Content attacking concepts or institutions may be removed if it is “likely to contribute to imminent physical harm, intimidation or discrimination” against people associated with the relevant protected characteristic. Prohibited attacks under the Hate Speech policy include “dehumanizing speech in the form of comparisons to or generalizations about” criminals, including sexual predators, terrorists, murderers, members of hate or criminal organizations, thieves and bank robbers. In the cases under review, Meta removed all three posts for “targeting people with criminal allegations based on nationality.”
When Meta referred these cases to the Board, it stated that they present a challenge on how to handle criminal allegations directed at people based on their nationality, under the Hate Speech policy. Meta told the Board that while the company believes this policy line strikes the right balance between voice and safety in most circumstances, there are situations, particularly in times of crisis and conflict, “where criminal allegations directed toward people of a given nationality may be interpreted as attacking a nation’s policies, its government, or its military rather than its people.”
The Board selected these cases to consider how Meta should moderate allegations of criminality based on nationality. These cases fall within the Board’s strategic priorities of Crisis and Conflict Situations and Hate Speech Against Marginalized Groups.
The Board would appreciate public comments that address:
- The impact of social media platform’s hate speech policies, especially Meta’s, on the ability of users to speak up against the acts of States, particularly in crisis and conflict situations.
- The impact of content alleging criminality based on a person’s nationality, including members of marginalized groups (e.g., national, ethnic and/or religious minorities, migrants), particularly in crisis and conflict situations.
- Meta’s human rights responsibilities in relation to content including allegations of criminality based on nationality, given the company’s approach of distinguishing between attacks against concepts (generally allowed) and attacks against people on the basis of protected characteristics (not allowed).
- Insights into potential criteria for establishing whether a user is targeting a concept/institution (e.g., state, army) or a group of people based on their nationality.
As part of its decisions, the Board can issue policy recommendations to Meta. While recommendations are not binding, Meta must respond to them within 60 days. As such, the Board welcomes public comments proposing recommendations that are relevant to these cases.
Comments
I believe that the phrase ‘river to the sea’ is safe to use as that reflects the occupied land of Palestine it should not be seen to be offensive or harmful to any other state as it is simply the truth. Palestine needs to be freed from ‘river to the sea’. It also goes to the heart of freedom of speech what other ways are we the public going to be controlled if this is restricted.
You are suppressing language and the right to free speech. This phrase was first used by the Israel government in a 2021 B'Tselem report entitled "A Regime of Jewish Supremacy from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea. When the Palestinian people disagree with this statement they took back that idea because this is their land. The land that Israel is trying to Control and colonize. Palestinians and protesters should be able to say from the river to the sea because Israel is the first ones to coin the term and of course the Palestinians are taking it back. It is not antisemite to say that phrase. We need education not censorship.
From the river to see should absolutely not be censored on meta platforms. It is simply a sentiment expressing a need for peace freedom. The phrase ’tiocfaidh ar lá’ in Irish which translates to our day will come - used to express irelands struggle for independence from the UK is allowed, so by this logic, it would be unjust to remove this phrase for one country and not another. From the river to the sea is a call to end apartheid and create an inclusive democracy. It’s a sentiment that expresses a desire and need for peace more than anything else.
All racist comments and attacks whether by race, religion, ethnicity or nationality should be removed and banned from Facebook.
Too far reaching in terms of limits, especially for conservative views !
Accusations that all persons of a named nationality are criminals is hate speech. It classifies and dehumanizes all persons in a nation. If a comment singles out a nation's policy makers or leaders it is not hate speech but is instead protected political speech.
I think the decision of banning post that have on it 'From the river to the sea' is a flagrant violation of free speech and completely oversees the historical and contextual meaning that it has. It has never been a claim for the disappearence of israelis or Israel, but a call for the right of palestinians to live in freedom from the river to the sea, so in the area that historically belongs to them.
Israel with its segregation policies, build a reality where palestinians are not only not living under the same rights as israelis, but where they inherent right to claim and sustain the identity of their population is constantly under threat. I would like you, the persons reading this, to imagine for an instance that you have no right to claim that you're from the nationality you are, you're oblied to live on a constant detrimation of basic needs and a constant humilliation through displacement and violence.
I want you to think about the possibility that if you go ahead with this banning, any other bannings to prevent further free speech that fights unfairness in the world are also possible. With this, you would be opening the ground for further and more extreme manipulation of the users opinions. And next, you will have a wave of dissenters in the upcoming times, putting in risk the future popularity of your platform. You, again, will comply with the lobbyst that pressaure you, leaving the users as 'victims' of this policies and forgetting that the reality that makes you possible is us, the users.
The statement "from the river to the sea" is not anti-Semitic as Arabs are Semites and is not a call to war as Palestinians are just requesting their land back. That statement and chant is akin to "the home of the brave and land of the free" should Native Americans and black people feel terrorized by that statement? This entire argument is absurd and to have to defend our freedom of speech to say 6 non-offensive, non-derogatory, nonviolent words in sequence is a direct violation of our freedom of speech. I implore you to wake up and see the day damage you are causing by seeing this precedent.
From the river to sea, Palestine will be free!