World

Press watchdog sues Facebook over hate speech

French court ruling may have ‘global impact’ as social media giant uses same terms of service worldwide, says Reporters Without Borders

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 23 Mar 2021 11:00PM

Press watchdog sues Facebook over hate speech
Facebook is accused by Reporters Without Borders of allowing the ‘massive proliferation’ of not just hate speech, but also false information, on its platform. – Screengrab, March 23, 2021

PARIS – Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders today announced that it has filed a suit against Facebook in France, saying the website breaks its own terms by failing to protect users against hate speech.

The Paris-based campaign group, known by its French acronym RSF, said it is taking Facebook to court for “misleading commercial practices”.

The United States social media giant has allowed the “massive proliferation” of hate speech and false information on its site, said RSF.

The group argued that while Facebook pledges in its terms of service to provide “a safe, secure and error-free environment” for users, it fails to do this as hateful content and misinformation are widespread on the platform.

The legal complaint, seen by AFP, targets subsidiaries Facebook France and Facebook Ireland, through which the company conducts some of its French activities. 

In particular, the complaint referenced death threats against journalists at French magazine Charlie Hebdo posted on Facebook, as well as Hold Up, a widely debunked French film about the coronavirus pandemic. 

Companies found to have carried out misleading commercial practices can be fined up to 10% of their average annual revenues in France.

Given that Facebook uses the same terms of service worldwide, the French court ruling “could have a global impact”, said RSF, adding that it is considering “launching similar cases in other countries”.

Social media giants have faced a barrage of legal action in France in recent months. 

Earlier this month, 14 feminist activists took Facebook to court, arguing that Instagram, which it owns, removed some of their posts while allowing other users to harass them with impunity.

Twitter is also the target of several French suits. – AFP, March 23, 2021

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