Meta’s oversight board rebukes company over policy overhaul
- Meta's Oversight Board upheld the company's decision to leave two videos featuring transgender people on its platforms.
- This ruling followed Meta's January 2025 policy changes weakening hate speech rules regarding gender identity.
- The content included videos showing a bathroom confrontation and a transgender girl winning a United States sports event.
- The board concluded the posts did not violate Meta's rules and posed no likely risk of inciting violence.
- LGBTQ+ advocates criticized the outcome, while the board recommended Meta assess the human rights impact of its policy changes.
40 Articles
40 Articles
Meta Oversight Board: Viral trans videos do not violate hate speech policy
Two viral videos featuring transgender youth will remain on Facebook and Instagram. Meta’s Oversight Board upheld the company’s decision despite criticism from LGBTQ+ advocates and concerns over hate speech. The Meta Oversight Board gender identity videos ruling has sparked national debate. While some defend the content as opinion, others believe it promotes harmful narratives about transgender people. Videos can remain online The board reviewed…
Videos demeaning trans women and girls don’t violate Meta’s guidelines, Oversight Board rules
Meta’s Oversight Board this week upheld decisions by Facebook and Instagram to leave up two posts targeting trans women even after numerous users reported them as harmful. The majority of the Oversight Board found that neither post violated Meta’s content guidelines for “Hateful Conduct” or “Bullying and Harassment,” basing the decision on reporting technicalities and recent changes to Meta’s content rules, per a joint statement. The Oversight B…
Meta Oversight Board rules anti-transgender videos don't violate hate speech rules
Meta's Oversight Board has determined that posts mocking and invalidating transgender people do not violate its bullying and harassment policies.The board ruled Wednesday that two posts about trans women that denied their gender identities didn’t violate the company’s hate-speech rules, according to a report from The Washington Post, including a video showing a trans woman using a woman’s bathroom and another showing a trans girl winning a girl'…
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