Facebook access is restricted in Russia
During the invasion of Ukraine, Russia has restricted access to Facebook due to the platform's position on the accounts of various Moscow-backed news sources. Roskomnadzor, Russia's communications regulator, accused the network of "restriction" and "violation of Russian residents' rights and freedoms." Facebook has refused to halt fact-checking and labeling information from state-owned news organizations, according to the company. The decision was made just one day after Russia started an invasion on Ukraine.
The exact limits are unknown, as is the extent to which Facebook's parent company Meta's other services - WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, and Instagram - are affected. The regulator had asked that Facebook remove the limits it imposed on official news agency RIA, state television station Zvezda, and pro-Kremlin news sites Lenta.Ru and Gazeta.Ru on Thursday.
Russian authorities "directed us to discontinue the independent fact-checking and labeling" of the outlets' material, according to Sir Nick Clegg, vice-president of global affairs at Meta. He stated, "We declined." However, he stated emphatically that Russians should continue to utilize Meta's platforms. "Regular Russians are using our applications to express themselves and organize for action," Sir Nick said, adding that the business wants "their voices to be heard."
Many state-owned Russian media sources have created a mostly favorable picture of Russian military gains in Ukraine, describing the invasion as a "special military operation" forced on Moscow. Meta said on Thursday that it has established a "special operations center" to monitor information related to the Ukraine war. VK and Odnoklassniki, Russia's Facebook analogues, are popular in the nation, although Facebook is also popular, as is Meta-owned Instagram.
Senator Mark Warner of the United States stated on Friday that Facebook, YouTube, and other social media platforms have a "clear obligation to guarantee that your products are not used to promote human rights violations." Meta has been under pressure to label misinformation, and has collaborated with third-party fact-checkers such as Reuters. Moscow has also stepped up its pressure on local news outlets, threatening to ban publications that include "false material" about its invasion of Ukraine.
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