How
Facebook May Secretly Foil Your Activist Plans
By
Kevin Mathews / care2.com
18
September, 2014
In
recent years, Facebook has become an unexpectedly crucial tool for
activism. The social media platform allows activists to efficiently
connect and communicate with one another in order to arrange
meetings, protests and boycotts. Unfortunately, activists who once
found that Facebook helped make organizing easier are now
encountering obstacles – and the resistance is coming from Facebook
itself.
With
little explanation, Facebook has been disabling pages related to
activism. In some cases, administrators who set up the pages are no
longer able to add updates. In others, the pages are being deleted
entirely. Understandably, activists are frustrated when a network of
10,000 like-minded individuals is suddenly erased, leaving no way to
reconnect with the group.
Realistically,
that’s the downside of relying on a hundred billion dollar company.
Facebook is a pro-business enterprise with countless partnerships
that undoubtedly pressure the site to limit the types of socializing
progressives may engage in, particularly activities that might harm
advertisers’ profits.
For
example, this year’s March
Against Monsanto events have
been popular with people across the globe, but not Facebook. An
upcoming invitation for a rally in St. Louis, Missouri where Monsanto
is headquartered was wiped
clean from the social networking site.
The administrator of the event received a very unspecific notice that
the event “violated Facebook’s Statement of Rights and
Responsibilities,” yet it is not clear how the event would have
violated any terms. What is clear, however, is that Monsanto
advertises on Facebook and may have had some
influence on the matter.
When
the “Boycott Target Until They Cease Funding Anti-Gay Politics”
group became extremely popular, employees at Facebook didn’t erase
the page, but
effectively shut it down anyway by
putting severe restrictions on it. Not only was the page’s creator
unable to edit or update the page, followers of the page could no
longer start new discussions or post links and videos. A similar page
that called for a boycott on BP was also rendered similarly useless
after receiving the same posting constraints.
In
these two cases, Facebook personnel explained that the boycott pages
did not meet the Terms of Service since they did not represent a
person or corporate entity. “To protect people from spam and other
unwanted content, we restrict pages that represent ideas or positions
– rather than discrete entities – from publishing stories to
people’s News Feeds,” said
a spokesperson.
Surely
the nearly one million BP boycott fans wouldn’t consider updates
from the page “unwanted,” particularly when they chose to follow
the page in the first place. They’re calling for protection from
oil spills, not spam. By claiming that corporate pages fit in well on
Facebook, but anti-corporate pages have no place, the site’s stance
is quite clear.
As
civil rights activist Audre Lorde wrote, “The master’s tools will
never dismantle the master’s house.” Perhaps we’ve been naïve
to believe that using a platform created by a corporate entity would
help activists to break free from corporate oppression. While moving
away from Facebook seems inevitable for some activists, it’ll
certainly have some consequences for at least the short term. Because
Facebook is so ubiquitous and its members tend to check in multiple
times a day, it makes reaching a wide audience fairly simple.
That
said, having proven its value in mobilizing people, social media will
continue being a pivotal strategy for activists, with or without
Facebook. As Facebook continues to align more firmly with sponsors
rather than users, you can expect to see more revolutionaries to join
alternative internet communities to promote their causes. In the
future, sites like [blatant self-promotion alert!] Care2.com [and
Films
For Action]
will be even more crucial in achieving positive social change.
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