To make sure users are able to understand which policies their content was enforced against, Meta should develop tools to rectify mistakes in its user messaging notifying the user about the Community Standard they violated.
The Board will consider this implemented when the related review and notification systems are updated accordingly.
Our commitment: We consistently work to improve the accuracy and granularity of user messaging following enforcement actions on our platforms. We will explore opportunities to update notifications via appeal transparency pathways to rectify user notifications in situations where the violation type has changed, but the enforcement action remains the same.
At times, a single piece of content may violate multiple Community Standards. While an enforcement action may stay the same, the cause for a violation may vary upon assessment by different reviewers. If multiple violation types are identified, reviewers are instructed to enforce against the most severe violation type, while tracking other relevant violation types. However, when content is re-reviewed after initial enforcement, we do not send an updated user notification if the reviewer selects a different violation type without changing the enforcement action. As noted in our guidance on
taking down violating content, we are aware that despite our best efforts, it is inevitable that we will make some errors when taking down content that violates our Community Standards. As such, we continue to strive towards increasing transparency, and will explore an avenue that allows us to do this through appeals outcome messaging. In the instance where a user has appealed an enforcement decision using the pathway described in our
guidance and our reviewers determine that the reason for enforcement is different from the one previously communicated to the user, we will provide an updated notice and update the information in the Integrity Hub or Account Status page, clarifying the relevant Community Standards violation. We will also explore opportunities to further clarify with users when these changes have taken place outside of appeal pathways, for example, if the content is escalated by internal teams for re-review.
User notification remains an ongoing priority across our teams and we continue to iterate on how to improve across this focus area. We are committed to ensuring that users receive the most accurate information regarding content takedowns and will expand on our progress in future updates to the Board.