City
Epaper

Facebook to limit Myanmar military-controlled pages for spreading misinformation

By ANI | Updated: February 14, 2021 13:00 IST

Facebook on Friday decided to reduce pages controlled by the Myanmar military (Tatmadaw) on grounds of spreading misinformation, reported Myanmar Times.

Open in App

Facebook on Friday decided to reduce pages controlled by the Myanmar military (Tatmadaw) on grounds of spreading misinformation, reported Myanmar Times.

Facebook said that it will remove misinformation claiming that there was widespread fraud or foreign interference in the 2020 elections.

"We are closely monitoring the rapidly evolving situation in Myanmar, and are in close communication with governments, institutions and non-governmental orgsations that care deeply about Myanmar's future," said Facebook.

The social media giant on February 12 released a detailed statement regarding the actions undertaken to protect free speech in Myanmar and limit pages and accounts controlled by the Tatmadaw.

For Myanmar citizens, Facebook is the main source of news and a platform to communicate. As such, the company is "treating the situation in Myanmar as an emergency," it said in the statement.

"Key among [the measures] is the decision to significantly reduce the distribution of all content on Facebook pages and profiles run by the Tatmadaw that has continued to spread misinformation," it said.

Facebook further said that it will no longer recommend military-run pages including its main pages to communicate such as the Tatmadaw Information Team and Tatmadaw spokesperson Brigadier-General Zaw Min Tun's pages, reported Myanmar Times.

It has also indefinitely suspended the ability of Myanmar government agencies to send content removal requests to the company through their normal channels reserved for authorities around the world.

Moreover, the social media giant will continue enforcing policies on Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior, which combats influence operations when it finds networks it previously removed attempting to re-establish a presence on Facebook, reported Myanmar Times.

The social media giant also asserted that extra protection will be provided to journalists, civil society activists, human rights defenders, and deposed political leaders from online threats and unauthorised access to their accounts.

This move will have a far-reaching effect on the pace of the anti-coup movement as the use of social media and other technologies by Generation Z have bewildered the military. They have outmaneuvered and exposed the old-fashioned coup-makers who used to suppress the earlier pro-democracy protests with the use of force.

On February 1, Myanmar's military staged a coup and overthrew the democratically elected government of the National League for Democracy (NLD), alleging voter fraud in the November 2020 elections that saw the NLD securing a resounding victory.

The military detained several political officials and activists including State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint, and declared a one-year emergency.

Despite military repression, widespread protests continue across Myanmar, including Yangon and other key cities.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: FacebookTatmadawFacebook connectivityAfter facebookNl salviCs - connectivityWhatsapp facebookFacebook newsFacebook twitterWin myint
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUK Watchdogs Urge Social Media Giants To Stop Children Accessing Platforms

MumbaiMumbai Cyber Fraud: Elderly Woman Duped of Rs 50.80 Lakh in Online Scam

MumbaiMumbai: Elderly Woman Duped by Fake Astrologer via Social Media, Case Registered at Byculla

MumbaiMaharashtra Cyber Steps Up Social Media Monitoring Ahead of Municipal Elections

TechnologyWhy Australia Is Banning Children Under 16 From Social Media? Here’s the Reason

International Realted Stories

International"Today will be largest volume of strikes": US Secy of War Pete Hegseth warns Iran

International"No power plant, stone ages": Trump sets 8 pm tomorrow deadline for Iran

InternationalMarkets, Malls to shut by 8 pm in Pakistan as fuel crisis deepens

InternationalTrump sets deadline, warns Iran of strikes​

InternationalArtemis II mission breaks record for farthest distance travelled by humans from Earth