Facebook Says It Plans To Remove Posts With False Vaccine Claims. (nytimes.com) 152
Facebook said on Monday that it plans to remove posts with erroneous claims about vaccines from across its platform, including taking down assertions that vaccines cause autism or that it is safer for people to contract Covid-19 than to receive the vaccinations. From a report: The social network has increasingly changed its content policies over the past year as the coronavirus has surged. In October, the social network prohibited people and companies from purchasing advertising that included false or misleading information about vaccines. In December, Facebook said it would remove posts with claims that had been debunked by the World Health Organization or government agencies. Monday's move goes further by targeting unpaid posts to the site and particularly Facebook pages and groups. Instead of targeting only misinformation around Covid vaccines, the update encompasses false claims around all vaccines. Facebook said it consulted with the World Health Organization and other leading health institutes to determine a list of false or misleading claims around Covid and vaccines in general. In the past, Facebook had said it would only "downrank," or push lower down in people's News Feeds, misleading or false claims about vaccines, making it more difficult to find such groups or posts. Now posts, pages and groups containing such falsehoods will be removed from the platform entirely. "Building trust and confidence in these vaccines is critical, so we're launching the largest worldwide campaign to help public health organizations share accurate information about Covid-19 vaccines and encourage people to get vaccinated as vaccines become available to them," Kang-Xing Jin, head of health at Facebook, said in a company blog post.
Facebook Says It Plans To Remove Posts (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Facebook Says It Plans To Remove Posts (Score:4, Insightful)
Next up: Yanking posts reminding people that the Tuskegee Syphilis Study was run by the CDC, because that might discourage people from getting vaccinated.
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You know it is possible to have nuance, right? (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, technically you might be right, as an anti-vaxxer spreading lies about vaccines might have also mentioned the Tuskegee Study, and when their account gets banned it's likely they'll take down everything. But you'd need a scanning electron microscope to see the hairs being split there.
This "all or nothing" attitude is really just a way to avoid engaging with the topic or addressing the issue. We don't do this fo
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Well, when after that happens, that'd be a good time to complain about it.
Re: Facebook Says It Plans To Remove Posts (Score:2)
> False Vaccine Claims from Unapproved False Information Sources
So let me check:
Correct vaccine claims from unapproved false information sources: OK
False other claims from unapproved false information sources: OK
False vaccine claims from approved false information sources: OK
False vaccine claims from unapproved true information sources: OK
False vaccine claims from unapproved false confusion sources: OK
False vaccime claims to unapproved false information drains: OK
That doesn't sound very effective ... Esp
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And are they licensed in my state?
Is this a game of "Who is less trustworthy?"? (Score:2)
Cause I'm not sure you wouldn't win at that game, dear Facebook. ;)
Who else is old? (Score:5, Interesting)
Remember when people used to say 100% seriously and utterly without irony that "the net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it"?
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Re:Who else is old? (Score:5, Interesting)
Remember when people used to say that Facebook's free Facebook-only ISP in India would lead to (only) Indian people being unable to tell the difference between Facebook and the Internet?
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Remember when people used to say 100% seriously and utterly without irony that "the net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it"?
This is actually still true but the part that people leave out is that you have to seek another path. These people may or may not seek another path which is their prerogative.
The information won't go away (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with Facebook is two fold:
a. They give anti-vax nutters an audience to spread their lies and insanity.
b. They slowly introduce people to conspiracy theories using algorithms designed to keep them engaged.
That last one is key. Take a regular person who gets their flu shot every year and expose them to an anti-vaxer's blog about Bill Gates microchipping them with the help of Pfizer and they'll go "This person's a loony" and never think about it again.
But that's now what FB does. FB will start them out with "wellness" influencers, move them onto homeopathy and the like and gradually ease them into the world of anti-vax. FB knows not to show them the crazy stuff right up front, not because they've researched it, but because they wrote an algorithm that says "if I show them this page I get 1 click + 1 ad impression and they stop, but if I show them this chain of pages I get 10 clicks today and 10,000 ad impressions in the following year as they doom scroll".
That's the power of Facebook and their algorithms.
BTW, can somebody help me boil the above down into a sentence or two? It's too much to communicate.
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Obviously it is not censorship when what you are suppressing is disinformation. Obviously you can know what disinformation is because reliable sources tell you. Also we have to kill all disinformation otherwise we will drown in it.
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Actually it is enforcing the law in numerous countries where to practice medicine you have to have appropriate qualifications and be registered with a professional body.
Giving advice about vaccines on Facebook is practising medicine. Put another way if I started mailing false claims about vaccines out to peoples homes I would soon find myself in deep trouble in most developed countries.
Finally if I actually was a properly registered medical practitioner, making false claims about vaccines would be enough to
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It's a bit more subtle than that.You can't do it all by yourself and have to rely on others but you can shift a bit towards more effort and skill.
If information grows very fast the ratio think/trust may only get worse.
It is true there is a massive shift towards relying on authoritative sources and suppressing those who disagree. It's a caricature really and it's even accelerating. The result will be that incredibly stupid ideas will be commonly accepted in the mainstream press and will be immune for change.
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It does. The internet is not a social media site. Although if you're 12 and all you've ever done is used Instagram and Facebook and get all your news from Twitter I can understand why you may be confused.
Will it help? (Score:2)
Much like what K says: "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it.".
I think it's always been this way, but the Internet (FB particularly) has enabled "people" to have a voice they would not have otherwise had.
I appreciate that FB is trying to help silence the dumb, panicky and dangerous posts, but I suppose we will always have it - I don't see it being successful in the long run. It's disheartening knowing this is the case, but I suppose it's good knowing how dumb the gen
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If i was facebook and actually wanted to help on the matter, i would focus on running news about people stealing the vaccines, "breaking the line" and so forth.
Specially if you get to get some big scandal like Bill Gates taking it early.
That would make illiterate people value the thing more and probably want to take it.
Now we just need Twitter to follow suit (Score:3)
If Twitter follows suit then they can remove all the garbage anti-vax posts made by a government politician here in Australia.
Re: Now we just need Twitter to follow suit (Score:2)
And countless celebrities and reality show stars, as well as anti-vaccine book authors and speakers.
Good (Score:3)
In Zuck we Trust! (Score:2)
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Re: Only the rejects of the species... (Score:2)
I wasn't aware "Facebook" authored content, I thought they just regurgitate what users submit...
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I wasn't aware "Facebook" authored content, I thought they just regurgitate what users submit...
Facebook posts a small amount of their own content, about themselves. They also post their own notices next to some other content. Those notices are obviously their content.
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Facebook Says It Plans To Remove Posts With False (Score:2)
Facebook Says It Plans To Edit User Content.
FTFY
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That is a poor summary, because that's something Facebook has been doing all along. This is about specifics, or at least, more specific than your statement. But I've noticed that you like to produce pat-yet-incorrect summaries, so I guess you're making your par.
People still use Facebook? (Score:2)
I quick Facebook about 9 years ago, after a short stint of about 2 years. Aside from the vitriol, I don't feel like I'm missing much besides pictures of people lunches and where they are on vacation.
The Ministry of Truth (Score:2)
Literally what it says.
One company who decides what is true and what is false for billions of people. Worse, not merely telling them what their cathedral thinks is true and what isn't, but preventing people from opposing the claim by any means, banning and deleting any dissent and the dissenters themselves. Still worse, it's not even the company cathedral, but the official state one. Therefore, a private company is hard enforcing the official published opinion of the state as the only allowed opinion.
Expec
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Great, can you post the studies to back up your claims?
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Like "drinking bleach" which Trump never said?
It's almost as if you never actually watched that particular Whitehouse livestream. You know, the one with context.
You know, the president who "refused to leave office" but actually left office.
In shame, after being impeached twice then inciting people to storm the capitol building to stop the democratic process, resulting in five deaths.
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Oh fuck off. Of course they lie and exaggerate, but nobody sane supports our "former President". Basically they, the media, make him out to be a 98 on the 0-100 scale of horribleness, when he's "only" about an 85, and still an absolute embarrassment and buffoon.
Somebody with less mental illness and even a slightly higher IQ than Trump would have been able to avoid most of the bludgeons the MSM and popular culture uses to bash him with. But Trump just hands them over on a silver platter - incompetence, narci
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...assertions that vaccines cause autism or that it is safer for people to contract Covid-19 than to receive the vaccinations.
and the Trumpeters instantly connect that with their hero.
It's almost like they're aware he lies every time he opens his mouth, but they don't care.
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So ALL of those millions of people are just crazy.
Not necessarily crazy, per se. Not all of them. Self-serving and/or delusional, the majority of them. The rest, definitely crazy. Some of them all three at once.
Why put quotes around 'former president'?
The quotes are misplaced, I agree. It really should say former 'president'.
Trump never really demonstrated any presidential qualities, so he was effectively president in name only, and not in the actual sense intended for the office. I mean, even a Trump supporter should be able to see that. Well, except the crazy ones, I guess.
Re:False? (Score:5, Informative)
The only thing that might be more perplexing than the psychology of Donald Trump is the psychology of his supporters. In their eyes, The Donald can do no wrong. Even Trump himself seems to be astonished by this phenomenon. "I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn't lose any voters, OK? It's, like, incredible."
The Psychology Behind Donald Trump's Unwavering Support - https://www.psychologytoday.co... [psychologytoday.com]
Re: False? (Score:2)
Sweeping generalities are ALWAYS wrong.
(Yes, that was intentional)
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I tend to prefer:
There are exceptions to every rule.
The advantage of the above is that it's possible to craft an exception that maintains logical coherency. Any further 'absolutist' rule you then state / create *such as yours) immediately has a 'get-out' clause built in.
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He left out cognitive dissonance, which is the force behind Dunning-Krueger and is really a better explanation for the support of Trump's base anyway because they are not particularly well-educated. Trump's supporters want to believe that they are smart, so they believe that voting for Trump is smart so that they can believe they are smart.
There are smart people voting for Trump, of course. They are wealthy, and they know what they're getting. It's the poor who support him who don't know what they're gettin
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Ahahaha. Thanks, I need a laugh. I see you nuts are now regurgitating that Time Magazine to your fellow low-IQ, poor reading comprehension set. That article said nothing about rigging elections but I keep seeing you kooky fucks yucking it up with each other.
Let me put on my Amazing Creskin hat and guess that you also believe Joe Biden admitted ("yuck yuck, he durn dun admitted it, Cletus!") that he had the biggest voter fraud organization, right? I kept seeing that bit of idiocy as well, when even a well t
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Yes, really. His entire base is either mentally deficient or mentally defective at this point. If you supported him or thought he may not be too bad through about early 2020 then that's not necessarily true (though it largely still applied to most of them), but if you supported him after that and especially at this point then yes it is true.
The quotes were more to mock the formal sounding title for that dipshit. To hear right wingers talk about Obama you'd think he was the lowest of the low and got zero res
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"Oh my god, Tom Brady is terrible, the most evil person on the planet, I don't know why he's not in jail yet."
When some people pick sides, they don't do it tepidlly, they put their whole heart and soul into it, leaving their brains resting peacefully in a jar. Their guy can do no wrong, the other guy can do no good. Like sports fans after too much drinking.
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Yes, really. His entire base is either mentally deficient or mentally defective at this point. If you supported him or thought he may not be too bad through about early 2020 then that's not necessarily true (though it largely still applied to most of them), but if you supported him after that and especially at this point then yes it is true.
The quotes were more to mock the formal sounding title for that dipshit. To hear right wingers talk about Obama you'd think he was the lowest of the low and got zero respect, but Trump who is demonstrably a piece of shit is "Former Mr President Donald God Emperor Trump".
Most of his support is just entrenched stubbornness and hatred of the "other side" at this point. I sort of get the latter part, I despise the far left too but it doesn't make me automatically think Trump isn't an embarrassment. I don't know why so many people feel the need to "pick a side" when both sides are shit.
We don't always need to call both sides "shit" especially when one side is far shittier than the other. Why is the republican party embracing "wrong"? I used to be a republican. But ignoring climate science, most science for that matter. Embracing populism and racism , and authoritarianism? Conspiracy theories? A sitting US member of congress openly admits that she believes that the Jews utilized a space laser to start wildfires in California so they could get a high speed train built on the cheap? Seriou
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I don't know why so many people feel the need to "pick a side" when both sides are shit.
Because on one side you have shit sitting in a pile, and on the other side you have shit sliding off a cliff. At least shit in a pile becomes soil. Shit falling off a cliff just ends up everywhere, and on everything.
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There are those who voted for Trump who are not also rabid fans. There are those who held their nose while voting for Trump, and I know a lot of those types. There are also those who voted for him who worship him. And a lot in between. Genreally when Trump fans are criticized it means those who are *fans*, not just voters who preferred him to Biden.
People who voted for Trump are not crazy; people who insist that the election was stolen despite a total lack of evidence are at the very least highly eccent
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People who voted for Trump are not crazy;
Crazy might be the wrong word, or it might not, but if they're poor and they voted for Trump then they're idiots.
When Trump actually got elected, it turned out that his median voter had something like a 15% higher income than the median Clinton voter. Voting for Trump makes some sense if you're in a high tax bracket and nothing matters to you but money.
It was always obvious Trump was going to fuck over the poor. It's what he was doing before he became president!
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Lines are blurring though. Traditionally back in the 60s thru 90s maybe, is that Republicans was the party of the money makers and Democrats were the party of the laborers and unions. Though that's oversimplified of course. Today it's a muddle, Trump claimed to be pro-union, even though Republicans had long been anti-union (famously with Reagan), and the unemployed voter typically leaned Repubican rather than Democrat despite Republicans having a terrible record at creating jobs, job programs, or public a
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I didn't even bring up parties. Which stands for what has changed over time, but they both are mostly full of corporate whores who do as they are told in order to secure further funding. However, all the reps and senators who actually care about people, and all those who actually have morals and stand by them, are in the Democratic party. The closest thing the Reps have to a moralist is Mitt Romney, who has time and again made strong statements and then caved in on them, usually the very next day.
There's a support forum on Reddit (Score:2)
There's some trolls on it because it's rapidly increasing in popularity, but the mods are quickly getting them under control. It's an actual support forum; e.g. it's a good place to discuss the challenges of having family who've fallen down the rabbit hole and get help bringing them back.
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*citation needed
Don't hold your breath, he didn't say any of that.
It's ironic that the leftist lunatic would choose that as his go-to slur. Lefties in Portland actually did try to trap about 100 people in the federal courthouse there and set fire to it.
Please don't feed the trolls (Score:2)
Re: False? (Score:2)
Exactly. He literally told them to burn down the Capital and kill the Democrats trapped inside.
Leaving the possibility you were aiming for sarcasm but missed aside, do you really not understand the meaning of the word Literally [merriam-webster.com]?
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Exactly. He literally told them to burn down the Capital and kill the Democrats trapped inside.
Leaving the possibility you were aiming for sarcasm but missed aside, do you really not understand the meaning of the word Literally [merriam-webster.com]?
"I had better luck with the tides than with getting people to use "literally" correctly."
-Canute
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...even if they merely confuse and divide support for our former President.
Not supporting the former president is unamerican.
Even worse is dividing support for him. The former president should never be questioned.
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Facebook cannot manage your information stream unless you decide to make Facebook your only source of information.
Re: False? (Score:1, Insightful)
I don't know how your brain even links that comment and "Russian"... do you even know?
But at least now I know who the insane moderatroll is, that is ruining Slashdot lately. It is you!
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So what happens if a Russian says something he agrees with? :D
Will he stop thinkink that? (Oooh! Exploitable!) ;)
Or will he suddently turn into a Russian?
The more interesting question ?
What would happen if Russia agreed with nearly every single thing he did? What would happen then?
Oh wait we already know...
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He is clearly a moron - and I mean clinically a literal moron. However, I think at the time there was some company looking at internal UV light therapy, and even some sort of ClO2 therapies. So I think you're still fundamentally correct that he is a moron who is repeating barely coherent sentence(ish) fragments about something that he half-heard. He's fundamentally too stupid to even discuss such things so, as with pretty much any subject, he should shut his whore mouth because he's unqualified.
That said -
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His problem was that he felt he needed to be at the center of everything and the subject of all converstations. Pathologically narcissist. He could have let the experts talk, but like a pointy haired boss he felt it was his job to mansplain things he didn't understand. "Not many people know that!"
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He is clearly a moron - and I mean clinically a literal moron. However, I think at the time there was some company looking at internal UV light therapy, and even some sort of ClO2 therapies. So I think you're still fundamentally correct that he is a moron who is repeating barely coherent sentence(ish) fragments about something that he half-heard. He's fundamentally too stupid to even discuss such things so, as with pretty much any subject, he should shut his whore mouth because he's unqualified.
That said - I think it's a stretch to translate any of this into "he told people to drink bleach".
For 4 years he made lies the new truth. He directly told people not to trust their own eyes and ear. Then for over 2 months he told all his loyal followers lies in order to advance his own agenda. Then he told them all to come to the capital. Then he had a coordinated list of speakers that lied some more and incited violence. Then his personal attorney spoke and told then "trial by combat" then he spoke and said let march to the capital and show no weakness , I'll be with you.
Are you high?
Re: False? (Score:2)
Trump took HCQ & Zinc, he said he did, and his doctor prescribed it - BEFORE he was infected with Covid.
Maybe try googling a bit, he took it back in May, as widely reported across numerous news outlets:
https://lmgtfy.app/?q=trump+to... [lmgtfy.app]
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Why didn't he take it after? Seeing as how it's the cure and all. Seems he stuck everyone else with HCQ and took all the hot monoclonal antibodies and other experimental treatments normal people couldn't get.
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Well Al Gore never said he invented the internet.
Al Gore said he "took the initiative in creating" the internet. Vint Cerf (and other peers) agreed. Al Gore was instrumental in turning the ARPAnet into the Internet.
Remember when Republicans said anyone who didn't support the Iraq war was a traitor? They said you can't support the troops and be against the war at the same time. Many leading conservatives such as Rush Limbaugh are on record saying that.
Many leading conservatives such as Rush Limbaugh are total dumbfucks who would be living in the street if not for their fanbase of adoring idiots who will listen to anyone who tells them what they want to hear.
Re:The vaccine won't keep you from getting the vir (Score:5, Insightful)
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This reply needs more attention (positive mods).
The OP is completely wrong and should be downmodded into oblivion.
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You obviously don't understand vaccines. Vaccines help your body fight an infection by priming your immune system to fight a particular virus/bacteria... but they do not keep you from being infected. If your immune system is really great and the vaccine was really successful, then it may be possible to both get an infection and get rid of it quickly enough that it is not able to replicate in your body and therefore not able to spread to other people.
We don't yet know if these vaccines confer that kind of
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"The Covid vaccine doesn't work" _is_ a false claim and should be removed. The results of the trials are public and have been heavily reviewed - the vaccines work (with various levels of effectiveness depending on exactly which one you're talking about).
Unless you're a virologist, and you're posting your newly peer-reviewed, published (in a reputable journal) clinical trial that shows otherwise... shut up.
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> Unless you're a virologist, and you're posting your newly peer-reviewed, published (in a reputable journal) clinical trial that shows otherwise... shut up.
Or if you're a lay person who is sharing a newly peer-reviewed, published (in a reputable journal) clinical trial that shows otherwise.
Realistically, lay people should probably not make claims either way about the thing because even attempting to summarize a reputable and peer-reviewed study has pitfalls, if you don't know what you're talking about.
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Realistically, lay people should probably not make claims either way about the thing because even attempting to summarize a reputable and peer-reviewed study has pitfalls, if you don't know what you're talking about.
So you're saying that the news media shouldn't cover vaccines at all, ever? Because most of them don't know much about their own profession, and their inability to accurate cover any kind of science story is very near a universal truth.
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No, the news media should hire people with science knowledge to write articles. They can use editors to make the articles readable, but the editors have to have enough knowledge to not fuck that up, too.
Unfortunately, no newspaper values science knowledge highly, because statistically no newspaper readers do so.
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"The Covid vaccine doesn't work" _is_ a false claim and should be removed.
"God loves you" _is_ a false claim and should be removed.
The results of the trials are public and have been heavily reviewed
So where can members of the public get their hands on source data used to arrive at conclusions? Would love to see it.
Unless you're a virologist, and you're posting your newly peer-reviewed, published (in a reputable journal) clinical trial that shows otherwise... shut up.
Appeals to authority is trash that belongs in the garbage.
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If you're arguing that people shouldn't be able to make claims about God on social media... I'm fine with that. Religion and belief in the super natural in general is one of the worst plagues of our society.
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If you're arguing that people shouldn't be able to make claims about God on social media... I'm fine with that. Religion and belief in the super natural in general is one of the worst plagues of our society.
While I disagree with both at least you are honest and consistent about your perspective.
"God loves you" is an unverifiable claim (Score:3)
As for where members of the public can get source data, scientific journals. Or the CDC. They're public you know. But nobody's asking you to get that detailed. They're asking you to know basic facts about vaccines you learned in 3rd grade and how to read a newspaper so you know that saying "The Vaccine doesn't work" or "The Vaccine causes Autism" are lies, harmful lies, and lies that should not be repeated.
If you can't even meet that very, very low bar the
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that has no immediate negative consequences.
Your criteria is hard to understand. You seem to be asserting speech with immediate negative consequences should be censored. If this is the case
and someone speaks the truth and in doing so immediate negative consequences arise should they be similarly censored? Or does the outcome not matter?
Also there are no immediate negative consequences to spewing crap about covid vaccines. The current demand for Covid vaccination far outpaces supply and will continue to be the case throughout most of the world for
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Unless you're a virologist, and you're posting your newly peer-reviewed, published (in a reputable journal) clinical trial that shows otherwise... shut up.
Great! Then I doubt there's going to be anything in the world that I can give my opinion on or partake in any conversation since I'm not at a level of authority on the subject. So my comments would have to succumb to "Man, I just took a huge dump."
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I'm sure there are other things in the world that you are well versed in that you can talk about.
Making simplified claims of "Vaccines don't work!" should not be allowed. Anyone with enough knowledge in this area would never post something like that. Instead, they may say "In one clinical trial with 300 participants, the Moderna vaccine was found to not be statistically effective at preventing infection." That does NOT mean that it doesn't work - it means that there is some evidence that it is not effect
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Everyone is entitled to how they want to live their lives (as long as that doesn't impinge on other's lives)... but I seriously doubt that you are speaking the truth here.
If you were strapped to a chair and your choices were to get a vaccine and feel bad for 1 or 2 days... or get shot in the head... I seriously doubt that you would choose to be shot.
My girlfriend just finished her second shot of a COVID vaccine. Both times she felt pretty crummy for about a day afterward... but compared to death or weeks o
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But having a fever for a day or so is not one of them.
My girlfriend just got her second vaccine shot - she had a fever for a day and felt horrible... but that is nothing compared to death.
But: At least you are consistent. You don't consider death to be that bad... so you have no problem imparting it on others by refusing to help control the spread of a disease...
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I was replying to someone who used a simple statement that _is_ definitely false without any qualifiers.
Note that I did add some qualifiers to my statement (about effectiveness).
You actually proved my point... that making a meme graphic that says "COVID Vaccines Don't Work!" shouldn't be allowed because it does not confer the nuance and truth of the situation.
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If I say "The Covid vaccine doesn't work", if that a false statement?
Yes, because there's no currently approved vaccine which people are able to receive which doesn't. Even the worst vaccine being rolled out works with sufficient efficacy to get the virus under control.
This isn't a slippery slope. You just don't understand how obviously silly your example is.
The Verge has an article on this (Score:2)
The article lays out what'll get you banned. FB has been fairly transparent:
So yes, saying "It doesn't work" will get y
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So yes, saying "It doesn't work" will get your post removed since it's demonstrably false. Saying "some trials show the vaccine has only 22% effectiveness, but those trials are questionable [arstechnica.com]" won't get you banned, but if you put that much nuance in a post good luck getting it to go viral.
What about saying "It does work"? Will that get me banned? I doubt it will. Is it a true statement? No, because each vaccine has its own success rate. And that's the point I was trying to make. By leaving it up to FB to moderate, you're letting FB decide what you should hear.
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