Facebook Censors Users during Media Blackout on Privatisation of the NHS


FB1

They say that you haven’t made it as a blogger until you get censored by Facebook.  In which case, I’ve made it. It failed to provoke a sense of validation in me though, just nausea and quiet fury. This is yet another case where bloggers filling the gaps left by the main stream media are finding themselves censored on social media – the printing press of the masses.

Censorship

 FBblock

Yesterday I wrote and published the article The Man Who Pushed a Toy Pig to Downing Street to Save our NHS.  It was intended to raise awareness and support for The Artist Taxi Driver’s art based protest of the privatisation of the NHS.

On publishing the article on my Facebook page I was asked (unusually) to fill in a captcha (the little box that asks you to type the letters you see so they know you aren’t a computer).  Shortly after, people were reporting that they were being asked to complete captchas to share it.  People who tried to open the article were warned by Facebook it was spam and the content unsafe, to dissuade people from reading and sharing the piece.  Despite all this, the article spread and had totalled over a thousand shares direct from the blog.  Then something weird happened.  It disappeared.

The article was removed from Facebook, from everywhere it had been shared. It was removed from every personal wall, group and page where it had appeared.  It disappeared from the wall of any user that had posted it.  The comments and conversations underway on people’s pages were erased.  It was like it had never happened.

I received confused and angry messages from Facebook users who had noticed it vanish from their walls and pages they manage. Now, anyone trying to share it receives the message in the above picture.

This is not an isolated case; Facebook has form on this.  Fellow blogger Tom Pride faced the same treatment yesterday when he satirised the Jobcentre and a disgruntled official had his article removed from Facebook as spam. Another Angry Voice has also covered the issue after being branded spam. Facebook has also been found censoring users, employing temporary and permanent suspensions of their accounts, after unjustly labelling them as spammers.

Nobody Mention the NHS!

 TM2

Last night, the House of Lords debated and approved new S75 regulations which force the NHS to put all but a tiny minority of its services out for competitive tender.  The MPs and Lords voting through this legislation were effectively voting to increase their own fortunes.  The excellent work of Social Investigations demonstrates this legislation has been prepared and voted through by MPs, Lords and Ladies with a personal financial interest in the outcome.

This should be a scandal.  It should be on the front page of every newspaper and the leading item on every news channel in the UK: CONFLICT OF INTEREST IN NHS SELL OFF!

Instead, silence.

This story did not appear on the BBC, ITV or Channel 4 flagship news programmes last night.

In aims to prompt mainstream coverage of the Lords debate, The Artist Taxi Driver (Mark McGowan) crawled four miles across London, pushing a toy pig.  He pushed the pig all the way to No. 10 Downing Street, where he handed in a letter signed by his children.  He did all this while suffering from bowel cancer.  He was followed by hundreds of people with banners and placards while Twitter and Facebook raged with coverage; the #wheresdaddyspig hash tag trended at various points in the day within the UK, and spread around the world.  Thousands tuned in to watch live coverage broadcast by individuals via bambuser online.

There was not a single UK based mainstream media article on this extraordinary event.  You could read about it in New York, but not in London.

Yet, for some individual or group, the mainstream media blackout was not enough; they wiped Facebook clean of our dissent too.

Facebook is not your Friend

 FB2

We must take this as a note of caution and a reminder that Facebook and other social media sites are not free spaces, they are owned by corporations.  If someone came and clasped their hand over your mouth in the street, there would be avenues for redress.  If Facebook does the same, options are limited.  Perhaps the most sinister element of this is not that we cannot now share this article on Facebook, but the disappearance where it had been shared.  This could happen to anyone, and it is happening to more of us all the time. Could there come a day when our entire blogs disappear from the web as ‘spam’? Possibly. This is why we cannot overlook these incidences of censorship.  All those with an interest in free speech and dissent ignore it at their peril.

UPDATE:

This article is now being blocked by Facebook.  The share button has been removed from posts and it is receiving the same CAPTCHA and spam warnings as the originally blocked article.  It had reached over 2k Facebook shares and has now reset here to just 22.

UPDATE 2:

We thought we had achieved success as the original post was briefly allowed back on FB, only to be withdrawn once again…

UPDATE 3:

The Drum have picked up the story of Facebook censorship. Please read and share their piece.

Take Action

You can sign up to follow the blog by email or wordpress, cut out the middle man.

You can follow me on Facebook and let them know I am not spam

You can contact Facebook and complain about this censorship

Share this article and let people know what’s happening.

 The Protest

You can see pictures of the #wheresdaddyspig protest here

You can see videos of the protest here

152 thoughts on “Facebook Censors Users during Media Blackout on Privatisation of the NHS

  1. Anonymous says:

    Facebook Police @ the front door.

    http://www.ahowardmatz.wordpress.com

  2. […] uygulayabiliyor. Örneğin Facebook’un hoşuna gitmeyen bir konuya dair linkleri Facebook’ta paylaşmanız mümkün değil. Tarihe geçen pek çok örnek var. İnsanları, fikirleri birleştiren dünyanın en büyük […]

  3. That guy says:

    Make the article smaller and upload it as a picture album with the title of the article.

  4. Colin Hutch says:

    Politics is like money
    It is a lie and only exists if we believe in it

  5. […] Facebook Censors Users during Media Blackout on Privatisation of the NHS. […]

  6. Anne Lee says:

    facebook censorship or someone making the system work for them????? Facebook would only remove something that’s reported as spam, so all your opposition would need to do is have their followers report it as spam and voila! your post and links are removed.
    Did your opposers do the right thing? Probably not. Did they use the system to achieve their aims? Sure did.
    Conspiracy theories are always based on something that’s not quite fact.

  7. Gary kewley. says:

    The NHS is communism. It was created by communists as a foot in the door. Get rid of it now. We’ll all be a lot healthier. Like we were before this toxic welfare state. You’re brainwashed.

  8. I’m not that much of a internet reader to be honest but your sites really nice, keep it up!
    I’ll go ahead and bookmark your site to come back down the road. Many thanks

  9. IncTwelve says:

    It’s well worth posting the article & others like it on http://www.inctwelve.com a social media platform which does not censor its users.
    Get your news on the front page for free.

  10. You’ll know see it being blocked by McAfee site advisor too! I assume they get information from Facebook on blocked pages

  11. My Jewelry and Purses 2020 says:

    Reblogged this on Jewelry and Purses 2020 and commented:
    Unlike Facebook and other social medial, Whouter.com does not censor its users.
    Check it out. The Only Global Free Free Speech Platform on the Internet at http://www.Whouter.com

  12. I’d suggest you duplicate your posts on another page somewhere to make sure they get through. Perhaps have your own website and upload pages to that. If that sounds like hard work you can email me for (free) advice – markcollinscope AT gmail DOT com .

  13. […] Second, we have the Scriptonite Daily saying these kinds of things: […]

  14. Julian says:

    Competitive tender is a good thing. Government tenders follow a process that is designed to ensure suppliers can deliver what is needed at a price that gives the tax payer value. Involvement with healthcare in some capacity does not equal capability to effect some dodgy weighting of the procurement process.

    Such paranoia. The next thing will be blogging about a new evil world currency… ZZZZZ

    • Glendon Kilminster says:

      anyone who thinks private business involvement in a not for profit organisation is a good thing is need of a serious rethink. anyone knows that in order to increase their profits the first thing they’ll do will be to cut staff. this will lead to an inferior service which will impact the entire NHS. we are heading for private healthcare which will mean people on low income forego healthcare to survive. free healthcare for all should be enshrined in law not a privilege for those that can afford it. Nye Bevan will be spinning in his grave

      • richiethom says:

        It is possible to have a good universal service that is also partly or totally privatised. Look at France, it doesn’t have to an nhs, but it’s not American style either, and it has world leading health care.

    • MG says:

      Oh dear Julian, what world are you living in. Is this the one where the NHS have not paid over $10b towards an IT infrastructure that was a complete failure and was out of date even before it was deployed.
      The fact is the MPs have a financial interest in the privatisation of key NHS services and are therefore should have declared an interest and not voted. They have not done this and continue to line their pockets as the previous gov’t did

    • Anonymous says:

      yes of course thats true in theory, why then do we see it failing miserably, even the yuppies from eaton cant answer that one, they just give prespun excuses

    • Anonymous says:

      Do you know what you are talking about? Have you ever worked with competitively tendered contractors. When you have you will find that they do not work in the interests of the end user and only seek to maximize the profit from the contract. This has been seen throughout the NHS via the Private Finance Initiative that has been a total disaster for many hospitals financial situation. The best example is Norwich, and check out the Private Eye report on PFI. I worked for many years with contracted out service providers with Thames Water and am very familiar with the sort of service that is provided by these clowns. For instance – Capita : known as Crapita for a good reason. One day I left the tube after two hours and my oyster card debited the full fare although I should not have incurred this penalty. Th LUL staff said that they were unable to help and that I must contact Oystercard Customer Services run by Capita. After I had had the phone put down and slammed down on me ten times I escalated the issue to a manager pretended that I was disabled to gain sympathy and he put the phone down on me after refusing to give me his name. As you may have gathered I do not anticipate a positive outcome from the outsourcing of NHS and government services over the coming months.

  15. […] Facebook Censors Users during Media Blackout on Privatisation of the NHS. […]

  16. mabhsavage says:

    All my WordPress sites are reported as “potential spam” if folks link through facebook and all of them require captcha entry to share a link. it’s frustrating as it discourages traffic, but it does seem to be universal for WordPress users, regardless of content. Mine are poetry and observational commentary; hardly a corporate threat! However for facebook to remove the posts completely is completely overstepping the line. It was my understanding that FB only remove links and content after complaints, so I wonder if you can contact them to find out what the exact nature of the complaint was, and indicate how much of a following you have? After all, it is in facebook’s interest not to drive its users away.

    • Anonymous says:

      Whats the blog name?

    • Facebook can remove what ever they like; it may not be “right” but it is their right.

    • yes! it happens to me too…it’s not censorship per se…it’s a bad app of some sort…people can mark posts as spam at their leisure and then it just goes into effect. I’ve been blocked too at times and I’ve written to the app people at the time and they fixed it for a while…now I’m getting the captcha thing again too.

  17. Have you thought about using URL shorteners. Do they bypass the Facebook censoring? Failing that, can you set up directs from a different domain?

  18. Anonymous says:

    Yeah I lost the job centre maybe theirs
    A lot of nurses Joabs b there . Point taken bud , I’m of to (post it ) Yours
    Robin bastards

  19. Jack says:

    Why on earth are you deluded into thinking Facebook has an obligation to publish and make available everything you choose to put on there?
    I pity those who cannot (or choose not to) understand basic elements of Facebook, how it is structured, and how it is managed.

  20. Anonymous says:

    I am cynical about your blog. What about all the nursing union? Doctors? Nurses? I am sure they would be up in arms. Secondly, how about a link to the debate in parliament?

  21. Anonymous says:

    was able to share without captcha

    • Anonymous says:

      They allow spam apps and Unsolicated Spam Page Suggestions but if you complain it’s you who are the spammer in their eyes.I think it’s time for a new Facebook Spam free and open.

  22. Thank you for highlighting this I had no idea it was going on.

  23. This is SHOCKING. :(((((

  24. trendyhammer says:

    Reblogged this on Kevs' Blog and commented:
    DISGRACEFUL.

  25. […] Facebook Censors Users during Media Blackout on Privatisation of the NHS. […]

  26. In the know says:

    This article is nonsense.
    It’s nothing to do with a Media Blackout on Privatisation of the NHS.

    I’d advise you to do a little more research before posting incriminating articles like this.

    • Anonymous says:

      Absolute rubbish. I had five anti thatcher posts and a link to a George Galloway video: George Galloway Good Morning deleted from my account and across every freind’s account. Political deissent is not tolerated on Facebook.

  27. James Clover says:

    The URL in your screenshot is incorrect.

    Maybe that’s the cause of your problems?

  28. Lexie Cannes says:

    Ditto, I’m getting the chapta and my FB readers are getting the spam warning. I haven’t written about the NHS.

  29. Craig says:

    Actually, Ghostery has showed me what your problem is. You’re using Whos.amung.us, which has been picked up as a threat by several antivirus systems. It might be a false positive, but I bet that’s what triggered the alarms at FB, not anything to do with the content of the post.

  30. Craig says:

    Have you checked to make sure it’s not something really obvious like a malicious WordPress plugin or theme you haven’t noticed?

    • Atlas says:

      Posting plain wordpress.com links to a Facebook post or comment probably forces FB to mark the links as spam and block them sometimes = MAJOR BUG on the side of Facebook’s spam detection system…

  31. Bazza says:

    I too found this disturbing, but cannot do anything to raise awareness on FB as im banned for posting derogatory comments in “suggested post” feeds…

    I cannot even like your FB page.

    Oh the irony…

  32. Chris says:

    If facebook is blocking an article, simply use a tiny URL shortening service such as http:://tiny.cc – then you can still post a blocked article.

    That said, I just posted the URL of article in question no problem, so it would appear that URL is no longer blocked.

  33. Asculum says:

    I suggest perhaps using something like Diaspora instead of FB. Since you own all the data. If enough people use Diaspora then it would spread and become a popular platform to host similar FB type profiles.

  34. Anonymous says:

    i ran this link through tinyurl and it posted with no problems and no captcha

  35. jimhinks says:

    I agree with Jack that it’s probably the result of an algorithm, but those algorithms exist and evolve in ways that can have sinister (if unintended) consequences.

    It seems fairly evident that they’re used to optimise the effectiveness of companies advertising products to FB users, and to minimise things that compete with (or don’t enhance) that process; links to wordpress blogs being a case in point – according to the algorithm, they ‘clog up’ the user experience of being sold things.

    All the while, FB have to balance this with the fact that users don’t go to FB to buy stuff, but to interact. Popular, uncontroversial content (cat videos, basically) equals gold dust to FB. It keeps users there. Controversial, complex, or political stuff isn’t of so much use; the people who share it don’t generally click on links to buy the kind of products that are advertised on FB.

    A way to minimise the controversial stuff is to set up a system of complaint whereby users can really easily mark things as ‘spam’ without the poster of the content having any redress (unless they’re a corporate client of FB, in which case, no problem). By setting up the system in this way, FB favours majority opinions and silences dissenting voices, which suits the companies that pay to have their goods on there (they sell more goods if these goods appear alongside content with broad appeal.

    I do have some personal experience of this: had my entirely uncontroversial non-profit literature in translation website blocked as spammy many months ago. Every time I tried to link to it on FB (or indeed, when anyone else tried to) it got a ‘blocked as spammy or unsafe’ knock-back. I asked for it to be unblocked many times (filling in the form, which no one at FB reads of course). So did other users of my website who wanted to link to it. No response, of course.

    The system is completely unaccountable, unless you have a corporate account with FB. And that means the mercantile message prevails.

    FB has become our de facto municipal space to meet and express ideas (for many people it’s the village hall or town square of their lives, which are mostly led online). Due to those algorithms, what can be said in the town square, and who says it, is being moderated and censored.

  36. mikeyukhc says:

    I sent someone a link to my WordPress site, in a private Facebook group earlier. No one else could follow the link, and I got a spam warning when I tried to follow it. There is nothing about the NHS on it, so is this an issue between Facebook and WordPress?

  37. Kingsville Mike says:

    Any business or group with this much access to personal information is an info portal to government abuse. Since FB has a distinct lean, they disapprove anything that they don’t agree with. In the US there are posters that are pro gun, conservative, That are getting their messages treated the same way.

    When we are digitally sharecropping, it should be expected.

  38. Eros says:

    People on facebook have reporteded your stuff as spam. It probably IS spam to most people.

    • sigivald@gmail.com says:

      Exactly.

      Facebook, Inc. does not care about the NHS, at all.

      Someone else may have made a campaign to get that link flagged as “spam” in a conscious manner.

      But Facebook? Does not care, itself.

      (Post something completely innocuous about, oh, fluffy bunnies.

      Then ask everyone you know to mark it as spam or inappropriate.

      The exact same thing will happen.)

      This is the heckler’s veto, not “Facebook” caring about British politics.

  39. An Activist Abroad says:

    This excellent article was shared on my page by a friend today after I experienced exactly the same thing. I have just started a blog called An Activist Abroad and posted an article entitled ‘The futility of guilt’ yesterday, which said nothing that controversial at all in comparison to the articles and views I share on say, for example, the Middle East. It was then removed and said the same thing as what appeared on your page, spam or unsafe content. This is ridiculous, but, as you said in your counter article to this censoring, it is completely predictable behaviour. So, what’s the positive upshot of all this? Well, I can now follow your blog, which is excellent!

  40. Reblogged this on glasgowsalive and commented:
    What’s the world coming to?

  41. Liz Taylor says:

    I have been getting those captcha things a lot lately eg when I share petitions. Should it be something to worry about ?

  42. I had a similar problem sharing a link to our WordPress page on our Facebook page. When we are specifically sharing the link to our listeners, I cannot understand why it was considered as spam :-/

  43. Just shared this article on FB (using the FB share button above), no problems, and shared the original “banned” piece as a comment below same (cut-and-pasted the link) – also no problems or CAPTCHAS. Looks like you’re back in business.

  44. […] Facebook Censors Users during Media Blackout on Privatisation of the NHS. […]

  45. Jack says:

    Oh, for fuck’s sake. It’s nothing to do with the NHS, or censorship, it’s an algorithm that’s screwed up somewhere and is counting many WordPress blogs – regardless of content – as spam. That doesn’t make it any better, it’s just that the world doesn’t revolve around you. Hard as that might be to believe.

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