Technology

Facebook's Oversight Board begins accepting appeals

“The Board is eager to get to work,” said the Colombian Catalina Botero-Marino, Oversight Board's Co-Chair

Ronaldo Lemos, a lawyer specialized in digital law and a Professor at the Rio de Janeiro State University (UERJ) that will be part of Facebook's Oversight Board. Photo: Ronaldo Lemos/Facebook
  • Two Latin Americans are members of Facebook’s Oversight Board;
  • Facebook may also seek Board’s guidance; 
  • Decisions will be binding on the company. 

Facebook‘s Oversight Board announced on Thursday that Facebook and Instagram users can now submit appeals on content removal to the Oversight Board for an independent review.

Facebook can also refer cases for a decision about whether content should remain up or come down from either Facebook or Instagram. Decisions made by the Board will be independent and binding upon Facebook. Over the following months, people will also have the opportunity to appeal to the Board on content they want Facebook to remove.  

READ ALSO: Latin Americans on Facebook’s Oversight Board will face a huge responsibility

The Oversight Board is a global body that will make independent decisions on whether specific content should be allowed or removed from Facebook and Instagram. Board Members are drawn from around the world with backgrounds in free expression, digital rights, online safety and other related fields. Two of them hail from Latin America: Brazilian Ronaldo Lemos and Colombian Catalina Botero-Marino

The Oversight Board has 20 people from all across the globe. Two of them are from Latin America. Photo: Facebook Oversight Board

“The Board is eager to get to work,” said Botero-Marino. She is Oversight Board’s Co-Chair. “We won’t be able to hear every appeal, but want our decisions to have the widest possible value, and will be prioritizing cases that have the potential to impact many users around the world, are of critical importance to public discourse, and raise questions about Facebook’s policies,” she said on a press statement.

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Users can submit an eligible case for review through the Oversight Board website, once they have exhausted their content appeals with Facebook. Facebook can also refer cases to the Board on an ongoing basis, including in emergency circumstances under the Expedited Review procedure. 

“Content that could lead to urgent, real-world consequences will be reviewed as quickly as possible,” said Jamal Greene, Co-Chair of the Oversight Board. “The Board provides a critical independent check on Facebook’s approach to moderating content on the most significant issues, but doesn’t remove the responsibility of Facebook to act first and to act fast in emergencies.” 

READ ALSO: Facebook pushes for data portability legislation ahead of new privacy rules

After selection, cases will be assigned to a five-Member panel with at least one Member from the region implicated in the content. No single Board Member makes a decision alone.  

Cases will be decided upon using both Facebook’s Community Standards and Values and international human rights standards. In addition to now accepting cases, the Board is able to recommend changes to Facebook’s Community Standards alongside its decisions. 

Each case will have a public comment period to allow third parties to share their insights with the Board. Case descriptions will be posted on the Board website with a request for public comment before the Board begins deliberations. These descriptions will not include any information which could potentially identify the users involved in a case. 

READ ALSO: What is the proposed fake news regulation in Brazil and how does it affect social media in the country?

Human rights and freedom of expression will be at the core of every decision we make. These cases will have far-reaching, real world consequences. It is our job to ensure we are serving users and holding Facebook accountable.

Catalina botero-marino, Co-Chair of the Oversight Board

The Board expects to reach case decisions and Facebook to act on these decisions within a maximum of 90 days.

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