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Hannah Clarke s family devastated after Facebook bans tribute page

Hannah Clarke s family devastated after Facebook bans tribute page 19 Feb, 2021 12:06 AM 5 minutes to read Hannah Clarke s parents Lloyd and Suzanne Clarke and her brother Nathaniel speak out after murder. Video / 9 News Hannah Clarke s parents Lloyd and Suzanne Clarke and her brother Nathaniel speak out after murder. Video / 9 News news.com.au The family of the Australian mum murdered by her Kiwi husband have lashed out at Facebook after her charity was wiped from Facebook, a day before the anniversary of the horrific attack. Hannah Clarke and her three children were killed after her abusive husband Rowan Baxter ambushed the family as they left for the morning school run on February 19 last year.

Ex-Facebook CEO Calls On Users to Delete the App to Fight Censorship

© press The former CEO of Facebook has called on users around the world to delete the app in protest of the social media giant s Communist China-like censorship efforts. Stephen Scheeler, former Facebook Australia and New Zealand chief executive officer, slammed CEO Mark Zuckerberg s sad decision to block news in Australia. The American Big Tech company has infuriated Australians after blocking them from reading and sharing news reports on the platform. The move came in response to a world-first law passed by Australian lawmakers to make tech giants pay media companies for the content they use. From Thursday, when Australians tried to view news accounts on Facebook, they were met with a message saying

Facebook blocks health departments, charities and its own pages in botched Australia news ban

Facebook s botched Australia news ban hits health departments, charities and its own pages Josh Taylor © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian The Bureau of Meteorology, state health departments, the Western Australian opposition leader, charities and Facebook itself are among those to have been blocked on Facebook in Australia as a result of the company’s wide-ranging ban on sharing or viewing news. © Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian Facebook has removed dozens of pages run by government departments, community organisations, charities and satire news outlets as part of its decision to ban Australian news. On Thursday morning Facebook began preventing Australian news sites from posting, while also stopping Australian users from sharing or viewing content from any news outlets, both Australian and international.

Facebook s botched Australia news ban hits health departments, charities and its own pages

Facebook s botched Australia news ban hits health departments, charities and its own pages Josh Taylor © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian The Bureau of Meteorology, state health departments, the Western Australian opposition leader, charities and Facebook itself are among those to have been blocked on Facebook in Australia as a result of the company’s wide-ranging ban on sharing or viewing news. © Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian Facebook has removed dozens of pages run by government departments, community organisations, charities and satire news outlets as part of its decision to ban Australian news. On Thursday morning Facebook began preventing Australian news sites from posting, while also stopping Australian users from sharing or viewing content from any news outlets, both Australian and international.

Facebook s Australian news ban also blocked links to weather, government services, poetry, and Facebook itself

Facebook s Australian news ban also blocked links to weather, government services, poetry, and Facebook itself Mashable 2/18/2021 Caitlin Welsh © Provided by Mashable Facebook s Australian news ban also blocked links to weather, government services, poetry, and Facebook itself Australians woke up on Thursday morning to find their news feeds, post history, and favourite news outlets pages scrubbed of all links to . well, news. Facebook followed through on its threat to ban the sharing of news links by and to Australian users, as the country s government moves closer to forcing big tech companies to pay to link media outlets content. The proposed news media bargaining code would see tech giants like Google and Facebook having to pay media companies for content that appears on their platforms. While Google initially threatened to pull out of Australia over the law, which has bipartisan support, it instead struck deals with dozens of platforms to pay them

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