Facebook's oversight board on Wednesday will
announce its decision on whether to uphold former President Donald
Trump's suspension from the platform.
Here are some key facts about how the board works:
WHAT DOES THE OVERSIGHT BOARD REVIEW?
The board, which some have dubbed Facebook Inc's "Supreme Court," can
overturn the company's decisions on whether some individual pieces of
content should be displayed on Facebook or its photo-sharing platform
Instagram. It can also recommend changes to Facebook's content policy,
based on a case decision or at the company's request, but these are not
binding.
The board, which only makes rulings on a small slice of Facebook's
content decisions, has said it aims to pick cases with wider relevance.
It said it has received more than 300,000 cases since it opened its
doors in October 2020.
Cases so far have involved issues such as hate speech, violence, and
nudity. Facebook has said the board's remit will in future include ads,
groups, pages, profiles, and events, but has not given a time frame.
It does not deal with Instagram direct messages, Facebook's messaging
platforms WhatsApp and Messenger, its dating service, or its Oculus
virtual reality products.
HOW DOES THE BOARD WORK?
The board, which is supported by a staff, decides which cases it
reviews. Cases can be referred either by a user who have exhausted
Facebook's appeals process or by Facebook itself for "significant and
difficult" cases.
Each case is reviewed by a five-member panel, with at least one from
the same geographic region as the case originated. The panel can ask for
subject-matter experts to help it make its decision, which then must be
finalized by the whole board by majority vote.
The board's case decision — which is binding unless it could violate
the law — must typically be made and implemented within 90 days, though
Facebook can ask for a 30-day expedited review for exceptional cases,
including those with "urgent real-world consequences."
Users will be notified of the board's ruling on their case and the
board will publicly publish the decision. When the board gives policy
recommendations, Facebook has to publish a response within 30 days.
WHO IS ON THE OVERSIGHT BOARD?
The board currently consists of 20 people but will eventually have about 40 members.
Facebook chose the four co-chairs — former federal judge Michael
McConnell and constitutional law expert Jamal Greene from the United
States, Colombian attorney Catalina Botero-Marino, and former Danish
Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt — who selected 16 other members
jointly with Facebook.
Some picks resulted from the global consultations conducted by Facebook to obtain feedback on the oversight board.
The members, who are part-time, also include civil rights advocates,
academics, journalists, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and a former judge
of the European Court of Human Rights.
The members are paid by a trust that Facebook has created and will serve three-year terms for a maximum of nine years.
The trustees can remove a member before the end of their term for
violating the board's code of conduct, but not for content decisions.
No comments:
Post a Comment