Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg has six months to answer these five questions Prabhjote Gill © IANS Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg has six months to answer these five questions
The Facebook Oversight Board has thrown the ball in Facebook s court to come up with a fresh set of guidelines that will determine how influential users on the platform are treated.
While the Supreme Court of Facebook upheld Facebook s decision to ban Trump, it deemed the indefinite ban to be arbitrary.
Now, Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg are on the clock and they have six months to answer some tough questions and navigate the potential political land mine that lies ahead.Facebook’s Oversight Board upheld the decision to suspend the account of former US President Donald Trump from the social networking platform, earlier this month, but it has also set the clock on Mark Zuckerberg to answer some tough questions in the next six months.
Facebook s Mark Zuckerberg has six months to answer these five questions
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But the technology companies are mostly leaving Indians to fend for themselves.
That’s the message from Mishi Choudhary, a lawyer who works to defend digital rights in India and the United States. Choudhary told me that she is furious about what she believes are failures of both Indian officials and the mostly American internet companies that are dominant in the country.
Tech companies, she said, should be doing far more to fact-check coronavirus information that is spreading like wildfire on their sites and stand up to Indian officials who are trying to silence or intimidate people for speaking out online.
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Open source developers in India are challenging its new Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code.
These rules target social media apps like Facebook, Twitter, and WhatsApp with moderation regulations and more.
But developers say these new rules can also put unreasonable compliance burdens on open source projects.
Developers in India are fighting back against a new set of rules that they say will hinder the country s fast-growing open source industry.
The government launched the new regulations in February to target major social media apps like Facebook, Twitter, and WhatsApp, but critics say that their broadness will add an undue burden that could threaten the very existence of some open source projects.
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