US conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has been suspended from Facebook for bullying and hate speech and is close to having pages tied to him and his Infowars website removed from the platform, the social media network said on Friday.
The radio host’s personal profile was banned for 30 days after it was found to have uploaded four videos published on pages maintained by Jones and Infowars that went against community standards, Facebook said.
The videos have been removed and Infowars and Jones’ pages “are close to being unpublished given recent community standards violations,” Facebook said in a statement.
Content removals count as “strikes” against individual pages. Pages maintained by Jones and Infowars have remained active because they have not crossed “a certain threshold of strikes” necessary for them to be unpublished, Facebook said.
Videos removed
YouTube removed four Alex Jones videos earlier this week and said Jones’ Infowars website faced permanent removal if his content was given three community strikes within 90 days.
“Our Community Standards make it clear that we prohibit content that encourages physical harm, or attacks someone based on their religious affiliation or gender identity [hate speech],” Facebook said. “We remove content that violates our standards as soon as we’re aware of it.
Infowars did not respond to a request for comment. Jones has defended the videos on Twitter as being “critical of liberalism.”
Since founding Infowars in 1999, Jones has built a vast audience. Among theories he has promoted is that the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington were staged by the government.
The Facebook suspension means Jones cannot post on his personal profile or his pages and cannot message, comment or post anywhere else on Facebook. Other people are notified that he is banned, the company said.
-
Facebook hammered as user growth cools
Facebook shares took a hit Wednesday after the world’s biggest social network reported weaker-than-expected user growth in the first full ... Technology -
Zuckerberg: Holocaust deniers ‘deeply offensive’ but won’t be banned from Facebook
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says while he finds Holocaust denial “deeply offensive,” he doesn’t believe that such content should be ... Digital -
Egypt sentences Lebanese female to eight years jail for Facebook post
A Lebanese tourist who was arrested last month for posting a video on Facebook complaining of sexual harassment and conditions in Egypt was sentenced ... Middle East -
Yemenis were able to identify, capture bike-riding thief by using Facebook
A group of young Yemeni men were able to identify and catch a motorcyclist thief after a successful campaign via Facebook.Social media users in Yemen ... Variety