TechLife News

ROHINGYA SEEK REPARATIONS FROM FACEBOOK FOR ROLE IN MASSACRE

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.,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from TechLife News

TechLife News1 min read
Techlife News
TechLifeNewsMagazine.com SOCIAL NETWORKS X.com @Techlife_News x.com/#!/Techlife_News Facebook facebook.com/TechlifeNews SUBSCRIPTIONS TechLife News Website techlifenewsmagazine.com iTunes App Store™ / Newsstand itunes.apple.com/app/te
TechLife News2 min read
Lawmakers And Advocates Make Last-ditch Push To Extend Affordable Internet Subsidy
Twenty-three million families in the U.S. will have bigger internet bills starting in May. That’s because a federal broadband subsidy program they’re enrolled in is nearly out of money. Dozens of people joined Biden administration officials, advocate
TechLife News4 min read
Journalists Critical Of Their Own Companies Cause Headaches For News Organizations
This spring, NBC News, The New York Times and National Public Radio have each dealt with turmoil for essentially the same reason: journalists taking the critical gaze they deploy to cover the world and turning it inward at their own employers. Whistl

Related