Meta多次无视欧盟机构对Facebook和Instagram用户禁令的要求
Meta repeatedly snubs EU body over Facebook and Instagram user bans

原始链接: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c152yvwjwkko

独立上诉中心(Appeals Centre Europe)的一份报告显示,各大社交媒体平台(尤其是 Meta)未能配合庭外争议解决程序。 据报道,在 4600 起涉及用户声称其 Facebook、Instagram 和 Threads 账号被错误封禁的案件中,Meta 仅提供了不到 100 起案件的证据。这种缺乏参与的态度,使得许多依赖这些平台进行商业活动或维持个人联系的用户,在申诉账号封禁时几乎求助无门。 该报告还强调了内容审核方面的重大失误。在审查仇恨言论投诉时,上诉中心发现各平台经常未能执行其自身的政策,超过三分之二的案件中,种族歧视、厌女和恐同内容仍未被删除。在整个行业内,对于该机构处理的 1 万起案件,各大平台有 72% 的情况未能提供必要的审查数据。 尽管 YouTube 和 TikTok 声称致力于与此类独立机构合作,但调查结果表明,这些科技巨头在管理封禁和执行安全标准方面,普遍存在系统性的透明度和问责制缺失。

Meta 目前因多次无视欧盟监管机构关于其 Facebook 和 Instagram 内容审核政策的意见而面临批评。尽管欧盟要求各平台与该机构“诚信协作”,但其裁决并无法律约束力,这意味着尽管存在分歧,Meta 目前并未违反欧盟法律。 这一消息在 Hacker News 上引发了观点两极分化的讨论。批评 Meta 的人指出了该公司审核标准中存在的虚伪性,指出 Meta 经常封禁关于健康和计划生育的合法内容,却被指对仇恨言论听之任之。相反,其他评论者则质疑欧盟的权威,认为 Meta 的行为在其法律权利范围内,强制合规属于越权。这场辩论反映了科技巨头与监管机构之间持续存在的紧张关系;一些用户主张对该公司处以巨额罚款,而另一些人则强调 Meta 在技术层面上并未触犯任何法律。
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原文

Meta repeatedly snubs EU body over Facebook and Instagram user bans

Imran Rahman-JonesTechnology reporter
Getty Images Close up of a woman's hands holding a black smartphone. She is wearing a bright red jacket and a silver ring.Getty Images

An independent body which hears disputes from social media users in the EU says Meta virtually never replies when it raises cases of people who say they have been wrongly banned from their accounts.

Appeals Centre Europe looked at 4,600 cases of Facebook, Instagram and Threads users who said they had been wrongly banned, but Meta provided evidence in fewer than 100 of these cases.

Last year, the BBC was contacted by hundreds of Facebook and Instagram users in countries around the world, including the UK, who claimed they had been wrongly banned and had no way of getting their accounts back.

Meta has been contacted for comment.

Appeals Centre Europe is one of a number of independent dispute settlement bodies which allow people in the EU to challenge social media platforms' decisions including on account bans and content moderation.

Its report shows only a snapshot of the wider social media landscape in Europe, where hundreds of millions of pieces of content are taken down by platforms every year for a variety of reasons.

Under EU law, online platforms should "engage in good faith" with the body, but its decision is not legally binding.

Account bans were the biggest issue reported to it in the year leading up to March 2026.

"In the vast majority of cases related to account suspensions, platforms are unable or unwilling to provide the content which allows us to independently review their decisions," it said in its transparency report.

Meta provided relevant content for fewer than 100 out of more than 4,600 account ban cases, the report said, "causing significant frustration among users".

Last year, more than 500 people contacted the BBC with complaints about their Instagram and Facebook accounts being banned without being able to appeal or speak to somebody at Meta.

Some spoke of the profound personal toll it has taken on them, including concerns that the police could become involved, and the effect bans could have on their online businesses.

Meta repeatedly refused to comment on the problems its users faced - though it frequently overturned bans when the BBC raised individual cases with it.

Alleged hate speech not removed

The Appeals Centre report also made judgements on content flagged to it which users said should be taken down, including more than 1,400 cases of content flagged as hate speech.

"In more than two-thirds of our decisions about hate speech, we found that platforms failed to enforce their own policies and left up hateful content," chief executive Thomas Hughes said.

He cited examples including misogynistic, racist, homophobic and transphobic posts.

On TikTok, 83% of potential hate speech was not taken down, followed by 74% for Instagram.

On Facebook the figure was 61%, while on YouTube it was 58%.

One example of a decision where Appeals Centre Europe disagreed with platforms included when racist comments comparing black footballers to monkeys were left up on Instagram following a Champions League match.

In another instance it said antisemitic videos on YouTube that were shared by prominent figures in Poland were allowed to remain on the site, which it said directly contradicted the platform's hate speech policy.

And it noted an AI-generated video about the Russia-Ukraine war was also allowed to stay up on TikTok, which it believed was in breach of its rules on misinformation.

However, social media companies did not provide relevant content for review in 72% of the more than 10,000 reports.

"In the nearly 3,000 decisions where we were able to review the content, we disagreed with the platform 59% of the time," the dispute body said.

Appeals Centre Europe added it did not receive consistent data on whether their decisions were implemented or not, and was "pushing platforms to provide this".

EPA The YouTube logo, in white writing beside the play button symbol of a white triangle on a red background, placed on light wooden boards.EPA
YouTube said it was committed to engaging with bodies such as Appeals Centre Europe

TikTok would not give the BBC an on-the-record response, but according to the company, it engaged with the Appeals Centre through meetings and emails.

The company's transparency report for the second half of 2025 said TikTok received 56,549 user reports of illegal content relating to hate speech in the EU.

In the same period, another transparency report said it removed 112 million pieces of content, including videos, comments and adverts, which broke its terms of service.

YouTube said its hate speech policy "outlines clear guidelines prohibiting content that promotes violence or hatred against individuals or groups based on certain attributes. We enforce this policy rigorously."

The company said it was committed to engaging with out-of-court dispute bodies such as Appeals Centre Europe, and had reached an agreement to share disputed content with them.

In a transparency report which covered the whole world, YouTube owner Google said more than 150,000 videos and 32,000 channels were removed from the platform between October and December 2025.

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