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Facebook bans posts denying and distorting the Holocaust

Facebook logo. (File Photo).

Responded the Simon Wiesenthal Center: “At a time when the Internet is awash with fake news and technological tools that enable governments and virtually anyone to manipulate information, we welcome Facebook’s change of policy to stand with historic fact and the 6 million Jews murdered by Nazi Germany during World War II.”

Facebook announced on Monday that it is banning posts that deny or distort the Holocaust.

In a post on the social-media site, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said his company is “updating our hate-speech policy to ban Holocaust denial.”

“We’ve long taken down posts that praise hate crimes or mass murder, including the Holocaust. But with rising anti-Semitism, we’re expanding our policy to prohibit any content that denies or distorts the Holocaust as well,” he wrote. “If people search for the Holocaust on Facebook, we’ll start directing you to authoritative sources to get accurate information.”

In the post, Zuckerberg acknowledged that he has “struggled with the tension between standing for free expression and the harm caused by minimizing or denying the horror of the Holocaust.”

However, Zuckerberg, who is Jewish, wrote that his “own thinking has evolved as I’ve seen data showing an increase in anti-Semitic violence, as have our wider policies on hate speech.”

“Drawing the right lines between what is and isn’t acceptable speech isn’t straightforward, but with the current state of the world, I believe this is the right balance,” he said.

Jewish groups applauded the move.

Anti-Defamation League CEO and national director Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted, “This has been years in the making. Having personally engaged with @Facebook on the issue, I can attest the ban on Holocaust Denial is a big deal. Whether it’s @ADL & #StopHateForProfit’s insistence, #NoDenyingIt-it doesn’t matter. Glad it finally happened.”

“Facebook’s decision to ban Holocaust denial and distortion postings is profoundly significant,” said American Jewish Committee CEO David Harris in a statement.

“With knowledge of the systematic Nazi murder of 6 million Jews waning in the United States and around the world, particularly among young people, the power and credibility of Facebook are vital to preserving the facts of the most documented genocide in history, and helping maintain the guardrails against any possible recurrence,” he continued. “There shouldn’t be a sliver of doubt about what the Nazi German regime did, nor should such a mega-platform as Facebook be used by anti-Semites to peddle their grotesque manipulation of history.”

“Denying the Holocaust has never been about free speech, but only as a tool for genocide-seeking Iran, neo-Nazis and bigots to demean the dead and threaten the living,” said Rabbis Marvin Hier and Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in a statement. “At a time when the Internet is awash with fake news and technological tools that enable governments and virtually anyone to manipulate information, we welcome Facebook’s change of policy to stand with historic fact and the 6 million Jews murdered by Nazi Germany during World War II.”

The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations said in a statement that “this decision is a significant blow to the those who traffic in anti-Semitism, and it will reduce the proliferation of harmful and inciting lies on the world’s largest social-media platform.”

Sacha Roytman-Dratwa, director of the Combat Anti-Semitism Movement, noted the “extremely positive step,” which demonstrates “how seriously Facebook is taking the issue.

Their landmark decision, however, comes with great responsibility. The world’s most important social-media platform is sending a message that Holocaust denial—and the hateful offense it causes—is well beyond the realms of free speech. It must now show that it is prepared to not only enforce this important decision, but that it will censure the vitriolic voices that promulgate these lies.”

(JNS).

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