Board, however, doesn't agree that Facebook should have said it would suspend the account "indefinitely."
What you need to know
- Facebook's Oversight Board upholds Facebook's decision to suspend former president Donald Trump's account.
- Board does not think Facebook's decision to "indefinitely" suspend trump was appropriate.
- Board wants Facebook to re-evaluate its decision of banning Trump in six months.
Facebook's Oversight Board upholds Facebook's decision to suspend former president Donald Trump.
The board however added in its decision that the social media giant, within six months, should reexamine its decision to "indefinitely" suspend the account.
"It was not appropriate for Facebook to impose the indeterminate and standardless penalty of indefinite suspension. Facebook's normal penalties include removing the violating content, imposing a time-bound period of suspension, or permanently disabling the page and account," the board said.
"The board insists that Facebook review this matter to deetermine and justify a proportionate response that is consistent withthe rules that are applied to other users of its platform."
The decision comes four months after the social media platform suspended the former president's account "indefinitely" following the riots on Capitol Hill. That happened shortly before current President Joe Biden's inauguration happened on January 20.
At the time Facebook said it allowed the former President to use the platform based on his own rules, but is no longer acceptable and is "fundamentally different." Facebook believed Trump used the platform "to incite violent insurrection against a democratically elected government. As such, the president's account on Facebook and Instagram have been suspended indefiniteley, and at least until the transfer of power is complete."
The board also indicated that it made policy recommendations for Facebook to implement in developming "clear, necessary, and proportionate policies that promote public safety and respect freedom of expression."
Twitter's chief financial officer Ned Segal told Yahoo Finance Live that the platform doesn't plan to change its decision on banning Trump.
"There has been no changes to anything we have shared int he past around teh former president's account," he said. The platform suspended Trump's account on Jan. 8.
"When you step back and thinka bout our policies, we want to work hard to be consistent, to be transparent so people know exactly what to expect from us. We don't have an oversight board [like Facebook]. Our team is accountable for the decisions that we make. There is no changes to anything we have talked about inthe past," Segal said.
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