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Facebook myanmar
Facebook myanmar






facebook myanmar

They also say Facebook failed to shut accounts and pages or takedown posts inciting violence or using hate speech directed at the ethnic group.įacebook arrived in Myanmar in 2011, arranging for millions of residents to access the internet for the first time, according to the lawsuit filed in California Superior Court for San Mateo County. The lawsuits say Facebook’s algorithms amplified hate speech against the Rohingya people and that it didn’t spend enough money to hire moderators and fact-checkers who spoke the local languages or understood the political situation. More than 10,000 Rohingya have been killed and more than 150,000 were subject to physical violence, according to the law firms organizing the cases. In 2018, United Nations human rights experts investigating attacks against the Rohingya said Facebook had played a role in spreading hate speech. Some 10,000 have ended up in the United States. The Rohingya are a Muslim ethnic group forced to flee persecution and violence in Myanmar starting in 2017, with an estimated 1 million living in refugee camps in neighboring Bangladesh.

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The combined legal claims from Rohingya refugees are being filed on behalf of anyone worldwide who survived the violence or had a relative who died from it.

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It’s the latest in a series of accusations that the social media giant fueled misinformation and political violence, outlined in redacted internal documents obtained by a consortium of news organizations, including The Associated Press.īetter double-check: Use the Verizon app? Check your settings to protect your privacyĪnother Trump probe: Deal that would bring Donald Trump's media company to the stock market under investigation Facebook, which was recently renamed Meta, did not immediately, reply to a request for comment. Lawyers in the United Kingdom have issued a notice of their intention to file a similar legal action. Lawyers filed a class-action lawsuit Monday in California saying Facebook’s arrival in Myanmar helped spread hate speech, misinformation and incitement to violence that “amounted to a substantial cause, and eventual perpetuation of, the Rohingya genocide.” LONDON (AP) - Rohingya refugees sued Facebook parent Meta Platforms for more than $150 billion over what they say was the company’s failure to stop hateful posts that incited violence against the Muslim ethnic group by Myanmar’s military rulers and their supporters. Watch Video: Facebook's language gaps weaken screening of hate








Facebook myanmar