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Facebook Ends Ban On Posts Asserting Covid-19 Was Man-Made (wsj.com) 451

Facebook has ended its ban on posts asserting Covid-19 was man-made or manufactured, a policy shift that reflects a deepening debate over the origins of the pandemic that was first identified in Wuhan, China, almost 18 months ago. An anonymous reader shares a report: The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday that three researchers from China's Wuhan Institute of Virology became sick enough in November 2019 that they sought hospital care, according to a previously undisclosed U.S. intelligence report. "In light of ongoing investigations into the origin of COVID-19 and in consultation with public health experts, we will no longer remove the claim that COVID-19 is man-made or manufactured from our apps," Facebook said in a statement on its website Wednesday. President Biden on Wednesday ordered a U.S. intelligence inquiry into the origins of the virus. The White House has come under pressure to conduct its own investigation after China told the World Health Organization that it considered Beijing's part of the investigation complete, calling for efforts to trace the virus's origins to shift into other countries.
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Facebook Ends Ban On Posts Asserting Covid-19 Was Man-Made

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  • by Libertarian_Geek ( 691416 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @09:48AM (#61427570)
    Maybe big tech shouldn't claim to be the arbiter of truth and justice.
    • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @09:51AM (#61427584)
      They are not going to willingly give up this power, so don't bother politely asking.
      • They are not going to willingly give up this power, so don't bother politely asking.

        It's not a power they can claim or relinquish. It's a power granted to them by idiots who go searching for the truth on social media. The fact that they have known for years that people used their websites as a source of information and they continued to allow misinformation to spread like wildfire is the real problem.

    • by thrull1 ( 568534 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @09:59AM (#61427620)

      I think this shows that we just shouldn't have social media. Cancel it all. Maybe start over, maybe try again but the current crop of enormous companies aren't good steward of the truth, our data or our privacy.

      • Too many people want social media. They have a psychological dependency on the sense of connectedness it gives them. Maybe this is unhealthy for them and causes depression, but so are things like alcohol, refined sugars, excessive salt or fat, etc. The very concept of freedom requires that we allow people to choose unhealthy lifestyles, and that would include something like social media.

        No extreme will work. "No social media at all" is now an extreme position, and it is not workable. "Social media with

      • Social media is problematic but it's better than what we had before with oligarchic media.

      • by MysteriousPreacher ( 702266 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @02:32PM (#61428874) Journal

        The problem goes far deeper than social media. We have payment processors deplatforming people for bucking Californian identitarian political orthodoxy. Even credit card companies and banks have jumped on the bandwagon, withdrawing service for ideological reasons. This despite no normal person assuming that merely providing mundane financial services constitutes an association or endorsement. Alternatives are created, then immediately attacked by services with which they must inter operate.

        If there is a solution then it's probably broader than social media. It's a question of whether we want a world in which basic services can be subject to passing ideological purity tests, even then still being withdrawn when the mob howls or when orthodoxy shifts.

    • by sound+vision ( 884283 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @09:59AM (#61427624) Journal

      They aren't the arbiter of anything for me. Sounds like a personal problem.

    • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:02AM (#61427642)
      And why have you claimed that big tech is the arbiter of truth? To me it never was; it is just another voice. If you want to place any stock in their voice, that is on you.
    • The only two things Big Tech can be 100% sure about are: zero and one.
      The more you combine multiples of these, the lower that percentage gets.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Maybe big tech shouldn't claim to be the arbiter of truth and justice.

      During pandemics, spreading BS about the infection is the slower equivalent to yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre when there is no fire. Lies = Dies.

      If one claims X about the virus, they were simply obligated to show evidence for X in proper context. In this case new evidence came out. (None it of "proves" a lab leak or what-not, only that China hid key clues.)

      • You are basing that argument that claim X will actually kill someone, but the people who were touting that turned out to be wrong about a lot of things (remember dont wear a mask?). The CDC and WHO are not infallible. The right to speak your mind is paramount in a democracy. Suppression of speech is a double wrong. It violates the rights of the speaker and the listener. - Fredrick Douglas.
        • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:51AM (#61427998) Journal

          turned out to be wrong about a lot of things (remember dont wear a mask?).

          Yes, new info is always coming in. This is after all the novel coronavirus. Just because they had incomplete evidence in the past is not a reason to make shit up.

          For example, one researcher, Dr. Li-Meng Yan, claimed it was likely man-made. If you quote that one person, you should also point out that it's an outlier opinion among subject matter experts, including those who reviewed her claims. That's Reporting 101, and FB is justified in blocking posts that don't point that out.

          Being accidently right does NOT morally justify skipping or abusing facts. Conclusions about important health claims should be based on verifiable facts at the time of writing.

          As they say, a broken clock is right twice a day. But it's still a useless clock.

          The right to speak your mind is paramount in a democracy.

          Not if lying gets people killed.

          For the record, I believe FB should flag such stories with a banner linking to the reason for the flag rather than outright removal. That's a decent compromise.

          • > Not if lying gets people killed.

            So you want to muzzle lots of Democrats [youtube.com] then?

            FWIW, I would agree that this shouldn't have been politicized like it was, but some of the restrictions (including those that lost in the Supreme Court) were absolutely not science-based. They should have banned things like singing indoors for any reason, rather than going through the various industries and hitting them with haphazard and politically-motivated rules.

            I find that harmful speech is best countered with more speec

      • by lsllll ( 830002 )

        During pandemics, spreading BS about the infection is the slower equivalent to yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre when there is no fire. Lies = Dies.

        Maybe, but not necessarily. If I came out and said "CV was man-made" (which is what TFS is about), it's hard to conclude that anyone would die if they believed that. On the other hand, if I came out and said "Masks don't protect you" and you believed me, then you MAY die (but not necessarily so). So there is a distinction between the two lies as it relates to leading the believers to die.

        If one claims X about the virus, they were simply obligated to show evidence for X in proper context. In this case new evidence came out. (None it of "proves" a lab leak or what-not, only that China hid key clues.)

        Then there's the possibility of my saying "I don't rule out that CV was man-made." THIS is the scenario that's most t

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Tablizer ( 95088 )

          If I came out and said "CV was man-made"... it's hard to conclude that anyone would die if they believed that.

          People were spitting and beating on Asians because they thought they had a relationship to the Chinese gov't and their "evil lab".

          • by lsllll ( 830002 )

            People were spitting and beating on Asians because they thought they had a relationship to the Chinese gov't and their "evil lab".

            That is probably the most stupid argument you could have used to support your position. By that measure, knives should be illegal because they kill people. What if it was true that CV was man-made in China? Does that then make it okay to start spitting and beating Asians?

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          it's hard to conclude that anyone would die if they believed that.

          Tell that to the Asians being brutally assaulted in the streets of US cities.

    • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:50AM (#61427988) Journal

      Maybe big tech shouldn't claim to be the arbiter of truth and justice.

      Who is? This seems to be a response to an unmet need in society. There is such a distrust in the justice system, the public has demanded private corporations dispense their own brand of justice. [wikipedia.org]

      The problem, as I see it, is a lack of understanding of basic philosophy. Most people have never heard the word epistemology [wikipedia.org], let alone know what it is.

      Our education system teaches us truth, but it doesn't tell us how to discover it. When the truth is unclear, the public demands some authority tell us the answer, because that is how we were taught as children.

      Big tech is just filling an unmet need, as any good capitalist should.

    • We all claim to be arbiters of truth and justice. Isn't the premise of libertarianism that everyone associates with whoever they please and that this social (and commercial) pressure does most of the regulating? You seem to think Facebook acted unjustly, so enforce your edit of "shouldn't" by not using Facebook.

      Here, Facebook made itself slightly less attractive to conspiracy cooks while people were dying in large numbers, and it has reversed itself now that things are cooling down. It might have been the w

  • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @09:49AM (#61427572)
    So what happened to all the fact-checkers, accusations of conspiracy theories, shadowbans for wrong-think and so on? Are we going to see retractions and apologies? More importantly, maybe we shouldn't trust partisan ideologies at Social Media with unilateral power to decide what is acceptable discourse seeing how they often get it wrong? It doesn't get more important than getting to the root cause of COVID and they got it wrong!
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by invid ( 163714 )
      I am a left-wing pinko communist, but I have to admit that liberals got this one wrong. The liberal zeal to protect Asians from racist attacks and to counter anything Trump said did influence liberals push the idea that the virus came from wet markets. We must not allow our ideology to cloud the truth.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Train0987 ( 1059246 )

        It had nothing to do with "protecting Asians from attack", it was all about catering to the Chinese market and to do that requires absolute fealty to the Chinese Communist Party.

        • by hjf ( 703092 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:20AM (#61427746) Homepage

          Except Facebook (and Instagram and Whatsapp) don't work in China. And they won't work in China. China does not allow foreign social networks and, as long as the CCP is in charge, never will.
          So in this case it really has absolutely nothing to do with the 'Chinese market'.

          • Except Facebook (and Instagram and Whatsapp) don't work in China. And they won't work in China. China does not allow foreign social networks and, as long as the CCP is in charge, never will. So in this case it really has absolutely nothing to do with the 'Chinese market'.

            Their advertisers do.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:12AM (#61427694)

        The liberal zeal to protect Asians from racist attacks ... did influence liberals push the idea that the virus came from wet markets.

        This seems backward to me. I lived in Asia and have seen many wet markets, with live animals being butchered amid the stench of feces and offal. They are disgusting. The sight of wild animals in cramped cages waiting for their turn on the butcher's block is even worse.

        Blaming Covid on wet markets is playing directly into the worst racist stereotypes of Asians.

        But blaming it on a lab leak shifts the culpability onto the ruling CCP, not the Chinese people.

      • It was never to protect anyone. It was always about managing optics. The right does it too. The left is usually better at it. This time, the left has egg on their face. Every policy has 3 sides: What they want you to think it does, what they really want it to do, what it really does.
      • The liberal zeal to protect Asians from racist attacks and to counter anything Trump said

        You mean those aren't good factors in determining what is true and false, possible and impossible?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      If the truth panels had existed in 2013, you would have never heard of the wild conspiracy theory being spread by Edward Snowden.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Apologize for what? The Republicans were so wrong we had to remove their wrong-think on every platform. Democrats are superior to Republicans in that even when looking at the same data and coming to the same conclusions, the Democrats came to the right conclusion and the Republicans came to the wrong conclusion. That's just how it is because anyone who doesn't think like a Democrat must be racist. And racism is wrong. So everything about them is wrong. Social media sites now allowing this content is to corr

      • You should have not checked the AC tag, that is about the funniest thing I have read on this article so far.

    • by ranton ( 36917 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:03AM (#61427652)

      It doesn't get more important than getting to the root cause of COVID and they got it wrong!

      Stating there is no credible evidence when there is no credible evidence is not wrong even if credible evidence eventually materializes.

      • The proximity of the Wuhan Lab alone is enough credible evidence to warrant serious investigation.

        How is it "racist" to suggest the virus leaked from China's only L2 virus lab but it's not to insist that it came from a Chinese wet market because the Chinese like to eat bats or whatever?

        • As well as the history or poor containment procedures which lead to the SARS outbreak. It was a pretty likely possibility, and it was obvious that it wasn't even looked into when the WHO went over there to look into the origins.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by sinij ( 911942 )

        It doesn't get more important than getting to the root cause of COVID and they got it wrong!

        Stating there is no credible evidence when there is no credible evidence is not wrong even if credible evidence eventually materializes.

        That is not all that happened. There was no credible evidence for any of the provided explanations, lab leak or zoonotic origin, yet discussion of lab leak was banned and zoonotic origin promoted. For purely political reasons! It is only after Bret Weinstein took personal risks (and was suspended for that!) to explain what gain of function research is did we got the full picture.

    • by omnichad ( 1198475 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:04AM (#61427662) Homepage

      It doesn't get more important than getting to the root cause of COVID and they got it wrong!

      Spreading the best available data is different than spreading rumors only to find out it may be half-true later.

      I still don't see any evidence of it being man made. Poor protocol studying virus from the wild would make a lot more sense, because what would be the point of a virus that doesn't kill all that many people overall? A bio-weapon?

      Spreading any information about it being man made is still just conspiracy theories at this point.

      • https://www.theguardian.com/us... [theguardian.com]

        That has some quotes from Trump when he claimed it was a lab leak. I don't see him saying there that it was man made, only that there was things he couldn't talk about that pointed to it possibly being a leak from a lab.

        The $600k that was spent, under Fauci's control, was for studying transmission vectors between bats and humans for Coronaviruses, why wouldn't it be possible that during those studies, they were able to see a transmission, that because of poor lab protocols

        • I don't see him saying there that it was man made, only that there was things he couldn't talk about that pointed to it possibly being a leak from a lab.

          Then I guess that probably doesn't have anything to do with the conspiracy theory in question that was banned on Facebook, which was a policy specifically about the virus being man made.

          Spending money won't give you much evidence that the virus was transmitted from the lab simply because there was no virus collected from the workers who got sick at the time. And why would it be collected? There was no reason to suspect anything at that point. Current evidence makes it more likely bad field protocols than

    • You need to keep in mind, it's still unlikely that it escaped from a lab, and even more unlikely still that it was bioengineered in the first place. There's no real reason to think it was.
      • by laxguy ( 1179231 )

        oh ok thanks, ill check back next week to see what opinions i should hold.

      • Who is saying it was bioengineered? I haven't been able to find that in the parent you are replying to, or in the comments made by Trump at the time.
        https://www.theguardian.com/us... [theguardian.com]

        The assertion was that it was a lab leak, and that is what is now being called a distinct possibility, when previously it was called a conspiracy theory. The gain of function research claim is possibly a conspiracy theory, I have seen no evidence that the lab was or wasn't doing those things, but claiming it is unlikely seems

  • I wish people (including slashdoters) would stop thinking in partisan terms and responses. Just because a Democrat or Republican said something doesn't mean it's wrong. We need to call out people on both sides. This Wuhan thing should have been tracked from the beginning. And the fact that the first cases were all near this lab should have been a smoking gun to at least investigate the theory of lab escape. And there is a big difference from 'engineered' vs natural mutation in a lab setting I was down-mo
  • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @09:59AM (#61427622)
    Just because some assertions without evidence *happened* to be right, doesn't mean that all assertions without evidence are right. If enough people assert enough crazy things, one of them will eventually be correct. That doesn't mean we want to start spreading conspiracy theories. I'm sure those who want to say "nah, nah, nah, I told you so" are delighting right now. But that doesn't change the idea that big claims require big evidence. Furthermore, as I always state when we have these discussions, Facebook does *not* prohibit individuals from making carefully worded statements such as "The lack of transparency in China raises suspicions of a lab incident." That is entirely different than "China did it intentionally." But even the latter statement is usually not blocked. It's only professionally produced misinformation propaganda that gets labeled.
    • Exactly! This is what is frustrating me. As new evidence arises, opinions change. That's how it should be.

      But initial unfounded suspicions treated as "See, we were right all along" when new details are uncovered later... that's how you wind up with people believing Qanon lunacy.

    • by omnichad ( 1198475 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:17AM (#61427730) Homepage

      It's still an assertion without evidence that the virus is man made. Lab escape does not mean lab made. They had thousands of samples of virus from bats all over the country already, and the virus could easily have been among them or mutated from them.

      Even "China did it intentionally" wouldn't run afoul of a ban on asserting that the virus was man made.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )
      Then why assert without evidence zoonotic origin? They declared one of the alternatives to be true and banned discussion of others before evidence for any of this was available. Don't try to hide your partisanship behind "evidence" - zoonotic origin hypothesis was promoted with elections in mind, not with truth-seeking in mind.
    • has been badly abused in recent years. Along with "without evidence" that often simply means without any evidence that the other side is willing to accept. And since both sides in any debate are prone to things the other side would call "baseless" or "conspiracy theory," perhaps we should err on the side of open debate?

      Just saying.

      So much of the news turns out to be wrong. Or at best baseless. Have you all noticed that?

      Also, anything in the form "just because... doesn't mean" comes across as a weak argument
    • What about assertions that were made with evidence of previous pandemics being caused in this way?

      SARS was released from a lab in China.
      The Wuhan lab, using US funding, was researching transmission vectors between bats and humans of coronaviruses.

      Trump said he couldn't talk about the evidence he had, not that there was no evidence. That was taken by the entire left wing media to mean that there was no evidence, and he was called a liar, and ignored.

      https://www.theguardian.com/us... [theguardian.com]

  • So if you had 100% proof that it was man made - or if you had 100% proof that it was natural. And in addition you had 100% proof that it was spread intentional - or 100% proof that it was spread by pure accident.

    How would that change what we are doing?
  • by erp_consultant ( 2614861 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:12AM (#61427692)

    to stop using these platforms. Social media has outlived its purpose. Initially it was about "connecting" people with one another. Seemed like a noble enough goal - allowing you to catch up with old friends and keep in touch with family. All for free. Then they discovered advertising. Soon afterwards they set about to track your every move, whether it was on the FB site or elsewhere on the internet, and sell your personal data to the highest bidder. No thought, or concern, was given to what was done with that personal information. Their customer was the advertisers, not you the FB user. They could care less about you. All that mattered was that they got paid.

    Then along came the news feed. At first it seemed to be more or less neutral. Then they started to target the feed based on your "likes". Eventually all of that was abandoned in favor of their own, mostly leftist, views. The problem is that a lot of people don't realize that they are being manipulated.

    Social media is a disease. Do yourself a favor and stop using it.

  • Facebook Ends Ban On Posts Asserting Covid-19 Was Man-Made

    And this is perhaps the root of the "lack of trust" by people refusing to get vaccinated.

    Lots and lots of things have been asserted as ground-level truth and any disagreement is a lie, literally, and can get you banned.

    The biggest one is, of course, that the vaccination is safe and yet... reports of complications from getting the vaccine are suppressed, individual dissent from highly qualified individuals is censored, and anyone with doubts is insulted and abused. You can get fired for not getting vaccinate

    • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

      Yes, there's some distrust when information is suppressed, but I'd guess that a lot fewer people are affected compared to when mis-information is wide spread.

      When exaggerations or outright lies are spread, that has a pretty big effect, even if some people are able to distinguish between bad information and good, plenty will just believe whatever they read. Remember when people were burning down cell towers because they thought 5G caused covid19?

    • by Larsen E Whipsnade ( 4686581 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @11:13AM (#61428084)
      I'm fully vaccinated, but not because I think vaccination is "safe," whatever that means.

      Nothing is perfectly safe. A sane adult calculates the risk and gets on with his life.

      The news does not cater to sane, fully functional adults. It either sensationalizes risk or ignores it entirely. The news caters to morons, probably because they're easier to cater to.

      As to what Facebook caters to, well... it doesn't cater to me.
    • reports of complications from getting the vaccine are suppressed,

      If you're just saying that everything posted by public commenters on VAERS not being treated as verified fact is suppression, then I don't think you understand how research works.

      The vaccination is probably safe - at least relatively safe compared to the virus itself. But all versions of the vaccine still bind to the ACE2 receptor (I think - at least the mRNA ones that replicate the spike protein) and run the risk of causing blood clotting problems. Especially if you have other risk factors for clotting p

    • on where anti vaxx came from [youtube.com].

      TL;DW, it was a scam by a lawyer to sue pharma companies and a doctor who wanted to sell testing kits for a made up disease. Media covered it for ratings and it spun out of control from there.
  • by unixcorn ( 120825 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @10:20AM (#61427752)

    I agree with the notion of stop using these social media platforms. Until they are willing to allow the free exchange of all ideas, they aren't truly social networks.
    In my opinion, the biggest problem is folks are getting their news from these sites and believing that it's true. There should be a banner on everyone's Facebook home page that says "all opinions here are those of their owners and none should be believed without further research using reputable sources".

  • That people studying viruses got sick early on does not mean that it is not entirely natural ... ....Virologists in the USA got sick with covid-19 while studying it as well ...

  • by kbahey ( 102895 ) on Thursday May 27, 2021 @12:13PM (#61428340) Homepage

    The simplest answer (Occam's razor) is inter-species infection with recombination ...

    Why? It did happen before with the original SARS then the MERS outbreaks.

    The Wuhan wet market is full of wild and domesticated animals of all sorts. I recall one biologist who visited that same Wuhan market a few months before the pandemic saying he counted the number of species of live animals there. It was 60 or something like that.

    The market can be where the jump to humans happened, but not necessarily where the recombination from the reservoir species to the intermediate species (plural).

    And these animals have to come from somewhere, be that a farm somewhere, or captured in the wild and transported. Add to that the fact that bats cover a large area when they go out to feed every night, and you see that a more plausible scenario is that a bat carrying a common ancestor to SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2, or a descendant of the former urinated and/or defecated, and an animal somewhere was infected. The virus mutated inside that intermediate host, and pieces of RNA form both 'parents' recombined. Other animals from the same species (farmed or wild), were infected and more rounds of mutation and natural selection happened, before it jumped to humans.

    Then one of these animals was taken to Wuhan. Or a hunter/farm-worker got infected and traveled to Wuhan, where more people were infected.

    Which intermediate species (singular or plural) is yet to be found. Note that with SARS, it took two years to link palm civets as an intermediate species (pandemic first started in 2002, pandemic ended 2003, and civet link in 2004). Here is just one paper [nih.gov] reviewing the available research as of 2007.

    It took two years to identify the intermediate species for SARS. So not surprising that it will take that long with the current one.

    And it is well known that other Coronaviruses did jump species without wet markets in Arabia (the MERS epidemic), and in pig farms in Mexico (flu), and China (flu). Heck, even the Spanish Flu is traced back to a farm in Kansas as the most likely starting place. And the Nipah virus affects people who drink palm sap that bats have urinated in. And so on and so forth ...

    Back to Coronaviruses...

    To add to all the above, swabs were taken from sick children in Sarawak. They are from rural areas where extended families live in a long house, with domesticated animals. Guess what they found? That some of these kids have Coronaviruses that is a recombined form from both Canine and Feline Coronaviruses (people living with cats and dogs in close proximity). There is no conclusion that it was this virus that made them sick, since they are pre-school age (immune system still naive), and already have other viruses. But the point is: the viruses replicated in these kids, so viruses jump species (three of them in this case) and recombine all the time.

    Click on the PDF link here [oup.com] and see for yourself. Oh, and there is no virology institute anywhere on Borneo...

    Could it be a lab escape scenario? Yes, if you mean that viruses collected from wild bats or other species were in the Wuhan Institute of Virology, then someone got infected by that natural virus. How likely? Not very likely that an fat enveloped respiratory virus that is easily eliminated by soap and water would infect someone by inhalation in a lab setting.

    Note that lab escape is very different from 'engineered by humans'. That is so remote of a possibility that it has to be discounted based on all the research into the genome by prominent virologists.

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