Meta Oversight Board finds account bans lack due process and transparency

8 reported

Meta’s Oversight Board, the independent body that makes policy recommendations to the company, stated Thursday that Meta’s account deactivations lack due process, violations are issued without clarity, and customer support for appeals is minimal. The board launched an investigation earlier this year into Meta’s account violations policy after reviewing a case involving threats of violence against a journalist, and it agreed that Meta was correct to permanently disable that account due to the severity of the threats. However, the board found what it described as “systemic human rights concerns” and a “lack of transparency and consistency” in Meta’s two-system approach to disabling accounts, which includes a strike-based system and a separate process for “egregious” violations. The board said the distinction between the two types of violations is not clear or well-documented. It also criticized Meta for charging users for Meta Verified access, which promises “24/7 access to email or chat agent support,” but failing to provide meaningful assistance to users with disabled accounts. The board recommended that Meta offer users a dashboard to review account stats, past violations, and appeal options, and provide clear notifications about violations at the time they are imposed, including the specific rule violated, the sanction, and appeal options. Meta responded by saying it welcomes the board’s decision and will update its post with initial responses to the recommendations after a review.

What’s reported

Meta’s Oversight Board said Meta’s account deactivations lack due process and transparency.
The board launched the investigation earlier this year after reviewing a case involving threats of violence against a journalist.
The board agreed Meta was right to permanently disable that account due to the severity of the threats.
The board found “systemic human rights concerns” and a “lack of transparency and consistency” in Meta’s two-system approach to disabling accounts.
The two systems involve strikes and a separate process for “egregious” violations; the board said the difference is not clear or well-documented.
The board criticized Meta for charging for Meta Verified access but failing to provide meaningful support to users with disabled accounts.
The board recommends Meta offer a dashboard for users to review account stats, past violations, and appeal options, and provide clear violation notifications.
Meta stated it welcomes the board’s decision and will update its post with initial responses after a review.

Key figures

Meta’s Oversight Board (independent governing body)
Richard Pauwels (retired L.A. County firefighter and paramedic)
Manomi Jayakody (user whose account was banned for CSE)
Albert Olgaard (content creator with 325,000 Instagram followers)
Alex Smola (designer whose account was permanently disabled)

Sources: TechCrunch

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