Facebook has said the sudden removal of dozens of Catholic pages from its site on Monday was the result of a technical glitch.
“All pages have now been restored. This incident was triggered accidentally by a spam detection tool. We sincerely apologise for the issue this has caused,” said a statement emailed to Catholic News Service on Wednesday.
Twenty-one Brazilian-based Catholic Facebook pages, such as a Papa Francisco Brazil page, as well as four English sites, had been unable to publish content.
Among those with pages who were affected was the executive director of Relevant Radio, Fr Francis Hoffman, affectionately known as “Father Rocky,” who has 3.95 million likes from Facebook fans around the world.
Relevant Radio reported that on Monday all the page administrators of the Relevant Radio “Father Rocky” Facebook page found themselves unable to log onto Facebook. Once passing through a security measure, they found the Father Rocky page left “unpublished, with no other details or explanation.”
Father Rocky livestreams Mass daily from his Facebook page, as well as posts prayers, photos and even educational videos for his almost 4 million followers. Early July 19, Father Rocky posted a picture of a statue of Mary, stating, “Thanks be to God, I am back on Facebook!!”
“This serves as a wake-up call and we urge all Relevant Radio listeners and Facebook followers to download the free Relevant Radio App as a secure and reliable resource for the daily Mass and inspirational programmes,” Father Rocky said.
The Facebook page Catholic and Proud, which has over 6 million followers, told CNS in a Facebook message that things appeared to be fine until Monday evening, when the page then became unpublished for the next day.
“The only notification I received was that we weren’t adhering to their policies, but that’s it, no reason, no example, absolutely nothing,” the Catholic and Proud page wrote to CNS. “That’s all we know. The inbox message reply here was also removed, so we couldn’t respond to anyone.”
According to Facebook, protocols aimed at taking down fake pages out of line with commercial spam policies allow for machine searches of posts that have similar comments indicating any abuse of policy. Many religious sites often produce similar comments to spam on their posts, which may cause their sites to go down. When Facebook realised the mistake, they were able to restore the pages.
In May 2016, Gizmodo, a design, technology, and politics website, published a piece accusing Facebook of censoring conservative trending topics, specifically the Conservative Political Action Conference and other conservative leaders. Their sources, former Facebook “news curators,” even admitted that stories that were covered by conservative outlets could not be trending unless mainstream sites covered similar topics.
In response, Facebook’s vice president of search, Tom Stocky, released a statement saying: “We take these reports extremely seriously, and have found no evidence that the anonymous allegations are true.”
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