Intentar ORO - Gratis
ROHINGYA SEEK REPARATIONS FROM FACEBOOK FOR ROLE IN MASSACRE
Techlife News
|Techlife News #570
With roosters crowing in the background as he speaks from the crowded refugee camp in Bangladesh that's been his home since 2017, Maung Sawyeddollah, 21, describes what happened when violent hate speech and disinformation targeting the Rohingya minority in Myanmar began to spread on Facebook.
-
"We were good with most of the people there. But some very narrow-minded and very nationalist types escalated hate against Rohingya on Facebook," he said. "And the people who were good, in close communication with Rohingya. changed their mind against Rohingya and it turned to hate."
For years, Facebook, now called Meta Platforms Inc., pushed the narrative that it was a neutral platform in Myanmar that was misused by malicious people and that despite its efforts to remove violent and hateful material, it, unfortunately, fell short. That narrative echoes its response to the role it has played in other conflicts around the world, whether the 2020 election in the U.S. or hate speech in India.
But a new and comprehensive report by Amnesty International states that Facebook's preferred narrative is false. The platform, Amnesty says, wasn't merely a passive site with insufficient content moderation. Instead, Meta's algorithms "proactively amplified and promoted content" on Facebook, which incited violent hatred against the Rohingya beginning as early as 2012.
Despite years of warnings, Amnesty found, the company not only failed to remove violent hate speech and disinformation against the Rohingya, it actively spread and amplified it until it culminated in the 2017 massacre. The timing coincided with the rising popularity of Facebook in Myanmar, where for many people it served as their only connection to the online world. That effectively made Facebook the internet for a vast number of Myanmar's population.
More than 700,000 Rohingya fled into neighboring Bangladesh that year. Myanmar security forces were accused of mass rapes, killings, and torching of thousands of homes owned by Rohingya.

Esta historia es de la edición Techlife News #570 de Techlife News.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Techlife News
Techlife News
INTEL WINS TESLA AS FIRST 14A CUSTOMER
Intel has landed Tesla as the first major outside customer for its next-generation 14A chip manufacturing process, giving the chipmaker a badly needed endorsement as it tries to prove it can compete with TSMC in advanced contract manufacturing.
3 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
EU BATTERY RULES MAY RESHAPE SMARTPHONES
The European Union is preparing to force another major hardware change across the smartphone industry, this time targeting one of the most difficult and expensive parts of modern phone ownership: the battery.
7 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
TESLA EARNINGS BEAT.BUT SPENDING SHAKES WALL STREET
Tesla beat Wall Street's first-quarter profit expectations, but the stock still fell as investors focused less on the quarter itself and more on what comes next: a much larger capital spending plan, a costlier push into Al and robotics, and a notably more restrained tone from Elon Musk about how quickly those bets will pay off.
3 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
MERCEDES C-CLASS EV GOES BIG ON SCREENS
Mercedes-Benz has revealed the new electric C-Class sedan, bringing one of its most familiar nameplates into the battery-powered era with a high-output dual-motor system, an 800-volt electrical architecture, and one of the most screen-heavy cabins in the compact luxury segment.
7 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
GOOGLE DEEP RESEARCH GETS ENTERPRISE DATA ACCESS
Google is expanding its autonomous research agent strategy with two new Gemini-powered tools, Deep Research and Deep Research Max, designed to search the open web, connect with private enterprise data, and generate more complete research reports through a single API workflow.
8 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
ADOBE LAUNCHES AI SUITE FOR ENTERPRISE MARKETING
Adobe has introduced a new artificial intelligence platform for corporate clients, moving deeper into agentic AI as competition intensifies across creative software, marketing technology, and enterprise automation.
8 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
MAC STUDIO DELAY SHOWS APPLE'S MEMORY STRAIN
Apple's next Mac Studio may not arrive until October, as the global memory shortage begins to disrupt the company’s professional desktop roadmap.
9 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
AMAZON DEEPENS ANTHROPIC AI INFRASTRUCTURE BET
Amazon is preparing to invest up to another $25 billion in Anthropic, deepening one of the most important partnerships in the artificial intelligence sector as demand for Claude continues to strain the startup's infrastructure.
8 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
MUSK KEEPS CONTROL IN SPACEX IPO PLAN
SpaceX’s public IPO filing gives Wall Street a clear message before one of the largest stock offerings ever attempted: the company may be going public, but control is not being sold.
7 mins
April 25, 2026
Techlife News
META TURNS EMPLOYEE WORK INTO AI TRAINING DATA
Meta is beginning to collect mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and occasional screen snapshots from U.S.-based employees’ work computers as part of a new internal effort to train AI agents on real workplace behavior.
7 mins
April 25, 2026
Translate
Change font size

