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Budi

(15,325 posts)
Thu Sep 16, 2021, 02:38 PM Sep 2021

Facebook Employees Flag Drug Cartels and Human Traffickers. The Company's Response Is Weak



Patricia Wanja Kimani at home in Nairobi last week. She was taken in by human traffickers who recruited workers on Facebook


https://www.wsj.com/articles/facebook-drug-cartels-human-traffickers-response-is-weak-documents-11631812953?redirect=amp#click=https://t.co/epI9tlfJhG

Facebook Employees Flag Drug Cartels and Human Traffickers. The Company’s Response Is Weak, Documents Show.
Employees raised alarms about how the site is used in developing countries
, where its user base is already huge and expanding

By Justin Scheck, Newley Purnell and Jeff Horwitz-Sept. 16, 2021

In January, a former cop turned Facebook Inc. investigator posted an all-staff memo on the company’s internal message board. It began “Happy 2021 to everyone!!” and then proceeded to detail a new set of what he called “learnings.”
The biggest one: A Mexican drug cartel was using Facebook to recruit, train and pay hit men.
The behavior was shocking and in clear violation of Facebook’s rules.
But the company didn’t stop the cartel from posting on Facebook or Instagram, the company’s photo-sharing site.


Scores of internal Facebook documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal show employees raising alarms about how its platforms are used in some developing countries, where its user base is already huge and expanding.
They also show the company’s response, which in many instances is inadequate or nothing at all.


Employees flagged that human traffickers in the Middle East used the site to lure women into abusive employment situations in which they were treated like slaves or forced to perform sex work.
They warned
that armed groups in Ethiopia used the site to incite violence against ethnic minorities.
They sent alerts to their bosses on organ selling, pornography and government action against political dissent, according to the documents.


SNIP
Facebook treats harm in developing countries as “simply the cost of doing business” in those places, said Brian Boland, a former Facebook vice president who oversaw partnerships with internet providers in Africa and Asia before resigning at the end of last year.
Facebook has focused its safety efforts on wealthier markets with powerful governments and media institutions,
he said, even as it has turned to poorer countries for user growth.

Developing story. MORE..
(I view this with my incognito tab in case of a paywall.)

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