Meta should update its internal guidelines to at-scale reviewers about calls for death using the specific phrase “death to” when directed against high-risk persons, this update should allow posts that, in the local context and language, express disdain or disagreement through non-serious and casual ways of threatening violence.
The Board will consider this recommendation implemented when Meta shares relevant data on the reduction of false positives identification of content containing calls for death using the specific phrase “death to” when directed against high-risk persons.
Our commitment: We are in the process of conducting policy development related to “calls for death.” This includes re-examining the policy on “death to” to strike the right balance between threatening speech and non-serious and figurative statements. Additionally, we are exploring refinements to our Violence and Incitement policy overall to enable more nuanced enforcement. Given the complexity and nuances inherent in this kind of speech, we are gathering insights from both external and internal experts before we implement any changes to our existing approach.
Considerations:
At this time, our policy development work related to our approach to “calls for death” is ongoing. We are committed to assessing the feasibility of implementing the Board’s timely recommendation to allow posts expressing disdain or disagreement through rhetorical and casual ways of threatening violence based on local context and language. As we noted in our initial responses to the
Iranian Protest Decision, we are considering ways to provide operable guidance for our at-scale reviewers to apply this policy, while balancing values of voice and safety.
As we noted in our response to the Board’s recommendation related to figurative speech in the
Iranian Women Confronted on the Street decision, we may consider a number of factors to understand the intent behind speech when it is escalated to us. For example, we may consider how users are engaging with the speech, its extent and reach, and any sensitivities surrounding the situation. With these inputs, we may lean towards safety when enforcing our policies at scale. If there are indicators that the speech is political and does not contain credible threats, we may allow that speech on our platforms on escalation. We are reviewing our policy approach to “calls for death” to ensure that we continue to strike the right balance.
We will provide updates in future reports for the board on the status of this policy development.