Facebook Collaborating With Israeli
Government To Determine What Should Be
Censored
By
Glenn Greenwald
September 13, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- Last week, a major censorship
controversy erupted when Facebook began
deleting all posts containing the iconic
photograph of the Vietnamese “Napalm Girl”
on the ground that it violated the company’s
ban on “child nudity.” Facebook even deleted
a post from the prime minister of Norway,
who posted the photograph in protest of the
censorship. As outrage spread, Facebook
ultimately reversed itself — acknowledging
“the history and global importance of this
image in documenting a particular moment in
time” — but this episode illustrated many of
the dangers
I’ve previously highlighted in having
private tech companies like Facebook,
Twitter, and Google become the arbiters of
what we can and cannot see.
Having just resolved that censorship effort,
Facebook seems to be vigorously
courting another. The Associated Press
reports today from Jerusalem that “the
Israeli government and Facebook have agreed
to work together to determine how to tackle
incitement on the social media network.”
These meetings are taking place “as the
government pushes ahead with legislative
steps meant to force social networks to rein
in content that Israel says incites
violence.” In other words, Israel is about
to legislatively force Facebook to censor
content deemed by Israeli officials to
be improper, and Facebook appears eager to
appease those threats by working directly
with the Israeli government to determine
what content should be censored.
The
joint Facebook-Israel censorship efforts,
needless to say, will be directed at Arabs,
Muslims, and Palestinians who oppose Israeli
occupation. The AP article makes that clear:
“Israel has argued that a wave of violence
with the Palestinians over the past year has
been fueled by incitement, much of it spread
on social media sites.” As Alex Kane
reported in The Intercept in June,
Israel has begun actively surveilling
Palestinians for the content of their
Facebook posts and even arresting some for
clear political speech. Israel’s obsession
with controlling Palestinians’ use of social
media is motivated by the way it has
enabled political organizing by occupation
opponents; as Kane wrote: “A demonstration
against the Israeli occupation can be
organized in a matter of hours, while the
monitoring of Palestinians is made easier by
the large digital footprint they leave on
their laptops and mobile phones.”
Notably, Israel was represented in this
meeting with Facebook by Justice Minister
Ayelet Shaked, an
extremist by all measures who has
previously said she
does not believe in a Palestinian state. Shaked
has “proposed legislation that seeks to
force social networks to remove content that
Israel considers to be incitement,” and
recently boasted that Facebook is already
extremely compliant with Israeli censorship
demands: “Over the past four months Israel
submitted 158 requests to Facebook to remove
inciting content,” she said, and Facebook
has accepted those requests in 95 percent of
the cases.
All
of this underscores the severe dangers of
having our public discourse overtaken,
regulated, and controlled by a tiny number
of unaccountable tech giants. I suppose some
people are comforted by the idea that
benevolent Facebook executives like Mark
Zuckerberg are going to protect us all from
“hate speech” and “incitement,” but — like
“terrorism” — neither of those terms
have any fixed meanings, are entirely
malleable, and are highly subject to
manipulation for propagandistic ends. Do you
trust Facebook — or the Israeli government —
to assess when a Palestinian’s post against
Israeli occupation and aggression passes
over into censorship-worthy “hate speech” or
“incitement”?
While the focus here is on Palestinians’
“incitement,” it’s actually very common for
Israelis to
use Facebook to urge violence against
Palestinians, including settlers urging
“vengeance” when there is an attack on an
Israeli. Indeed, as theWashington
Postrecently
noted, “Palestinians have also taken
issue with social-media platforms, saying
they incite violence and foster an Israeli
discourse of hatred, racism and
discriminatory attitudes against
Palestinians.”
In
2014,
thousands of Israelis used Facebook to
post messages “calling for the murder of
Palestinians.” When an IDF occupying soldier
was arrested for shooting and killing a
wounded Palestinian point blank in the head
last year,
IDF soldiers used Facebook to praise the
killing and justify that violence, with
online Israeli mobs gathering in support.
Indeed, Justice Minister Shaked herself —
now part of the government team helping
Facebook determine what to censor — has used
Facebook to post astonishingly extremist
and violence-inducing rhetoric against
Palestinians. Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and his other top
ministers have
done the same. As Al Jazeera America
detailed in 2014:
The hate speech against Arabs that
gathered momentum on Facebook and
Twitter soon spilled out onto the
streets of Jerusalem as extremist
Israelis kicked up violence and caused
chaos. This violence then made its way
back online: YouTube
and
Facebook videos show hundreds of
angry Israeli mobs running around
chanting, “Death to Arabs,” and looking
for Palestinians to attack. A video
of an Israeli Jew attacking a
Palestinian on a public bus shouting,
“Filthy Arabs, filthy Arab murderers of
children,” emerged from Tel Aviv. And
more video
footage showing Israeli security
forces using excessive force on a
handcuffed Palestinian-American boy
further called into question who was
really inciting this chaos.
Can
anyone imagine Facebook deleting the posts
of prominent Israelis calling for increased
violence or oppression against Palestinians?
Indeed, is it even possible to imagine
Facebook deleting the posts of Americans or
western Europeans
who call for aggressive wars or
other forms of violence against
predominantly Muslim countries, or
against critics of the West? To ask the
question is to answer it. Facebook is a
private company, with a legal obligation to
maximize profit, and so it will interpret
very slippery concepts such as “hate speech”
and “inciting violence” to please those who
wield the greatest power. It’s thus
inconceivable that Facebook would ever dream
of deleting this type of actual advocacy or
incitement of violence:
Facebook is confronting extreme pressure to
censor content disliked by various
governments. The U.S. and U.K. have
jointly launched a campaign to malign
Silicon Valley companies as terrorist
helpers or ISIS supporters for refusing to
take more active steps to ban content from
those whom these governments regard as
“terrorists.” Israel has been particularly
aggressive in attempting to blame Facebook
for violence and coerce it to censor. Family
members of Israelis killed by Palestinians
are suing Facebook claiming the company
helped facilitate those attacks, while some
Israelis have actually complained that
Facebook is biased against Israel
in its censorship practices.
About all of this, The Interceptsubmitted
the following questions to Facebook, which
has not yet responded; we will update this
article if it does:
1)
Has FB ever met with Palestinian leaders
in an effort to identify and suppress
posts from Israelis that incite
violence? Is there any plan to do so?
2)
If an Israeli advocates that
Palestinians be attacked and/or bombed,
would those posts violate FB’s terms of
service and be deleted? Have any ever
been?
3)
What role, exactly, is the Israeli
government playing in helping FB
identify content that should be barred?
4)
FB said it “granted some 95% of the
requests” from Israeli officials to
remove content. What percentage of
requests from Palestinians to remove
content has been accepted?
5)
If someone says that Israel’s occupation
is illegal and should be resisted using
all means, would that be permitted?
It’s true that these companies have the
legal right as private actors to censor
whatever they want. But that proposition
ignores the unprecedented control this small
group of corporations now exerts over global
communications. That this censorship
is within their legal rights does not
obviate the serious danger this corporate
conduct poses, for reasons I set forth
here in describing how vast their
influence has become in shaping our
discourse (see
here for a disturbing story today on how
Twitter banned a Scottish pro-independence
group after it criticized an article from a
tabloid journalist, who then complained she
was being “harassed”).
One
of the early promises of the internet, a key
potential benefit, was its ability to
equalize disparities, to enable the
powerless to communicate as freely and
potently as the powerful, and to politically
organize in far more efficient ways. Those
who continually call on companies such as
Facebook and Twitter to censor content are
seriously jeopardizing those values, no
matter how noble their motives might be. It
is difficult to imagine any scenario more at
odds with the internet’s promise than
Facebook executives and the Israeli
government meeting to decide what
Palestinians will and will not be allowed to
say.
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