Facebook-owner Meta released its first annual human rights report on Thursday, following years of accusations that it turned a blind eye to online abuses that fueled real-world violence in places like India and Myanmar.
The report, which covers due diligence performed in 2020 and
2021, includes a summary of a controversial human rights impact assessment of
India that Meta commissioned law firm Foley Hoag to conduct.
Human rights groups including Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch have demanded the release of the India assessment in full,
accusing Meta of stalling.
In its summary, Meta said the law firm had "noted the
potential for Meta's platforms to be connected to salient human rights risks
caused by third parties," including "advocacy of hatred that incites
hostility, discrimination, or violence."
The assessment, it added, did not cover "accusations of
bias in content moderation."
Rights groups for years have raised alarms about anti-Muslim
hate speech stoking tensions in India, Meta's largest market globally by number
of users.
Its top public policy executive in India stepped down in
2020 following Wall Street Journal reporting that she opposed applying the
company's rules to Hindu nationalist figures flagged internally for promoting
violence.
In its report, Meta said it was studying the India
recommendations but did not commit to implementing them as it did with other
rights assessments.
Asked about the difference, Meta Human Rights Director
Miranda Sissons pointed to United Nations guidelines cautioning against risks
to "affected stakeholders, personnel or to legitimate requirements of
commercial confidentiality."
"The format of the reporting can be influenced by a
variety of factors, including security reasons," Sissons told Reuters.
Sissons, who joined the company in 2019, said her team is
now comprised of eight people, while about 100 others work on human rights with
related teams.
In addition to country-level assessments, the report
outlined her team's work on Meta's COVID-19 response and Ray-Ban Stories smart
glasses, which involved flagging possible privacy risks and effects on
vulnerable groups.
Sissons said analysis of augmented and virtual reality
technologies, which Meta has prioritized with its bet on the
"metaverse," is largely taking place this year and would be discussed
in subsquent reports. © Reuters