Meta apologizes over removal of Malaysia PM posts on Hamas leader

Anwar’s posts included a video showing the premier on a phone call with a Hamas official, offering his condolences. (AFP/File)
Anwar’s posts included a video showing the premier on a phone call with a Hamas official, offering his condolences. (AFP/File)
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Updated 06 August 2024
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Meta apologizes over removal of Malaysia PM posts on Hamas leader

Meta apologizes over removal of Malaysia PM posts on Hamas leader
  • Meta said post was removed by mistake
  • Apologize ccomes a day after Anwar’s office summoned Meta representatives to seek an explanation

KUALA LUMPUR: Tech giant Meta apologized Tuesday for removing social media posts by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim about the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh.
The apology came a day after Anwar’s office summoned Meta representatives to seek an explanation on why the leader’s Facebook and Instagram posts about Haniyeh’s death had been removed.
Meta is the parent firm of the two popular social media platforms.
“We apologize for an operational error where content from the Prime Minister’s Facebook and Instagram Pages were removed,” Meta said in a statement emailed to AFP.
“The content has since been restored with the correct newsworthy label.”
The political leader of Palestinian armed group Hamas was killed in the Iranian capital Tehran on Wednesday in an attack blamed on Israel, which has not directly commented on it.
Anwar’s posts included a video showing the premier on a phone call with a Hamas official, offering his condolences.
On Instagram, there was a note by Meta, shared by Anwar, that the posts were taken down because of association with “dangerous individuals and organizations.”
Anwar’s office had described Meta’s removal of the posts as “a blatant suppression of free expression” and demanded an apology from the tech behemoth.
Anwar last week accused the tech giant of “cowardice” for removing his posts.
Israel, the United States and the European Union consider Hamas a terrorist organization.
Anwar, who met Haniyeh in Qatar in May, has defended Malaysia’s ties with the Iran-backed Palestinian militant group, which launched a deadly attack against Israel on October 7 that triggered the war in Gaza.
Anwar stressed during a visit to Germany in March that Malaysia’s links were with Hamas’ political wing and not with its military arm.


YouTube tightens safety features for teens on weight and fitness videos

YouTube tightens safety features for teens on weight and fitness videos
Updated 2 min 27 sec ago
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YouTube tightens safety features for teens on weight and fitness videos

YouTube tightens safety features for teens on weight and fitness videos
  • Google-owned platform updated algorithm to stop repeated recommendation of such videos

LONDON: YouTube has announced stricter safety measures for teen users around weight and fitness-related videos, aiming to protect young viewers from potentially harmful content.

The Google-owned platform said it has updated its algorithm to prevent these videos from being recommended to users aged 13 to 17, though the videos will not be banned outright.

This decision comes after experts raised concerns about the negative impact of repeated exposure to content that promotes unrealistic beauty or fitness standards.

“As a teen is developing thoughts about who they are and their own standards for themselves, repeated consumption of content featuring idealized standards that starts to shape an unrealistic internal standard could lead some to form negative beliefs about themselves,” explained Dr. Garth Graham, YouTube’s global head of health.

While such content does not violate YouTube’s guidelines, the platform acknowledged that excessive viewing could be harmful to some users’ mental well-being.

The new rules, developed with input from YouTube’s youth and family advisory committee, target content that promotes unrealistic physical ideals or encourages aggressive behavior.

In addition, YouTube said it is introducing the Family Center Hub, a tool to help parents monitor and manage their children’s activity on the platform, including insights into their kids’ subscriptions, comments, and video uploads.

These updates are set to roll out globally, including in the Middle East.


Russian lawmakers denounce US sanctions against Russian state media network

Russian lawmakers denounce US sanctions against Russian state media network
Updated 05 September 2024
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Russian lawmakers denounce US sanctions against Russian state media network

Russian lawmakers denounce US sanctions against Russian state media network
  • US justice department on Wednesday filed money-laundering charges against two employees of Russian state media network RT
  • Previous US intelligence assessments have found that Moscow tried to meddle in the 2016 and 2020 elections

MOSCOW: Russian lawmakers denounced as an infringement of freedom of speech US punitive measures against state media group RT as part of what officials in Washington described as a campaign to influence the November presidential election.
The US justice department on Wednesday filed money-laundering charges against two employees of Russian state media network RT for what was described as a scheme to hire a US company to produce online content to influence the election.
Previous US intelligence assessments have found that Moscow tried to meddle in the 2016 and 2020 elections. Russian officials have suggested that the United States has also meddled in its domestic affairs.
The Kremlin and the Russian Foreign Ministry have repeatedly said that Moscow has not meddled in the US election, but is watching it closely.
Konstantin Kosachev, Deputy Chairman of Russia’s upper house of parliament, told RIA news agency that the US moves were aimed at preventing alternative views from being made known.
“Russian media in this sense have become increasingly popular and in demand,” Kosachev told RIA.
“That is the reason behind the rabid reaction of the US authorities, which is totally at odds with the principles of freedom of speech and defending the rights of journalists.”
Leonid Slutsky, chairman of the State Duma lower house’s foreign affairs committee, branded the sanctions “a witch-hunt, pressure on freedom of speech and vulgar censorship.”
“The agents of the ‘empire of lies’ are waging war on everyone who tells the truth about the policy of contemporary neo-colonialists,” said Slutsky.
There was no immediate Kremlin reaction to the sanctions.
The Kremlin in June dismissed as absurd US intelligence assertions that Russia sought to meddle in the election and has said that US spies were intent on casting Russia as an enemy.
President Vladimir Putin had suggested in the past that, for Russia, Joe Biden would have been preferable to Donald Trump, though he spoke with irony about Biden.
Ahead of the announcement of the sanctions, Russian lawmaker Maria Butina said any suggestion of meddling in the election was nonsense. Moscow, she said, felt that the only winner of the election would be the US military-industrial complex.
“The US claims were and are pure rubbish and a witch hunt,” Butina, who spent 15 months in US prison for acting as an unregistered Russian agent and is now a lawmaker for the ruling United Russia party, told Reuters.
“Russia thinks it does not matter who wins the US elections – the only winner is the US private military-industrial complex. That is what matters – and nothing else,” Butina said.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in an interview published on Sunday that Russia saw US Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris as a more predictable opponent than Trump, but said there was no prospect of an improvement in relations with Washington anyway.


Journalist working for AFP released by pro-Turkiye Syria factions

Journalist working for AFP released by pro-Turkiye Syria factions
Updated 04 September 2024
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Journalist working for AFP released by pro-Turkiye Syria factions

Journalist working for AFP released by pro-Turkiye Syria factions
  • Bakr Al-Kassem was detained for questioning by authorities, but no official charges were filed against him

BEIRUT: Syrian journalist Bakr Al-Kassem, who works with media outlets including AFP, has been released a week after pro-Turkiye factions detained him in rebel-held northern Syria, he told AFP on Tuesday.
“I was released late Monday and I am well. I am now with my family,” said Kassem, 28.
“I will return to my work as a journalist as soon as possible.”
Local police from pro-Turkiye factions detained Kassem on August 26 in the city of Al-Bab, some 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the Turkish border.
He had been covering an event in the city with his wife Nabiha Taha, who is also a journalist.
Taha was released shortly afterwards and said their house was searched and Kassem’s computer, cameras and mobile phone were confiscated.
Kassem said he was questioned about his work as a journalist in areas controlled by Ankara-backed factions, and that no official charges were brought against him.
“We are relieved that Bakr has been freed and we thank all the colleagues and organizations that expressed their solidarity with him during his detention,” said AFP’s Global News Director Phil Chetwynd.
“We hope that he will be able to resume his work without any restrictions.”
Kassem has worked as a photographer and correspondent for AFP since 2018 covering Syria’s civil war, as well as a deadly earthquake in February 2023 in which he lost 17 family members.
He has also worked for Turkiye’s official Anadolu news agency and local Syrian media outlets.
AFP, the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders (RSF) had called for his immediate release.
RSF in a statement on X welcomed “the good news” of Kassem’s release, saying it was “relieved” he was free, but noting “72 reporters remain detained or missing in Syria.”
The country is ranked second-last in the world on RSF’s press freedom index.
Local journalists and activists had organized sit-ins in the region demanding Kassem be freed, some holding signs reading “journalism is not a crime.”
Syria’s war began after the repression of anti-government protests in 2011 and spiralled into a complex conflict drawing in foreign armies and jihadists, killing more than 500,000 people and displacing millions.
Turkish troops and Turkiye-backed rebel factions control swathes of northern Syria, and Ankara has launched successive cross-border offensives since 2016.


Republicans focus on Muslim voters with ads spotlighting Harris’ support for Israel

Republicans focus on Muslim voters with ads spotlighting Harris’ support for Israel
Updated 04 September 2024
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Republicans focus on Muslim voters with ads spotlighting Harris’ support for Israel

Republicans focus on Muslim voters with ads spotlighting Harris’ support for Israel
  • Social media ads appear to target Muslims and Arabs in Michigan
  • Democrats condemn campaign as a ‘dirty trick’ intended to sway voters away from Harris

LONDON: Republicans have allegedly launched a new digital advertising campaign aimed at Muslim voters, which emphasizes Vice President Kamala Harris’ support for Israel amid the ongoing military action in Gaza.

First reported by the Huffington Post, the ads appear to target voters alienated by the Biden administration’s response to the Gaza conflict.

The campaign runs on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat, specifically targeting areas in Michigan with significant Arab and Muslim populations, a demographic deeply affected by the situation in Gaza.

The ads are focused on ZIP codes including Dearborn, the only Arab-majority city in the US, known for its “uncommitted” movement that declined to back President Joe Biden in the 2024 Democratic primaries.

While the spending on these ads has been modest, according to disclosures from Meta and Snapchat, they direct users to a video highlighting Harris’ support for Israel.

In the 30-second clip, a female narrator says: “Vice President Harris has chosen a side — the right side.” The narrator adds: “Harris has made herself clear: She stands with Israel and the Jewish people.”

The video also portrays Harris as opposing supporters of a free Palestine, with the narrator adding: “When supporters of a free Palestine stood up for Gaza, Harris put them in their place. And supporters of a free Palestine? They hate her.”

The Future Coalition Political Action Committee, a GOP group associated with Pennsylvania Republican operative Ray Zaborney, has been identified as the sponsor of the ads.

Michigan Democrats have criticized the ads, describing them as a “dirty trick” intended to sway Arab-American and left-leaning voters away from Harris.

A Democratic operative in Michigan has criticized the campaign and accused the GOP of using underhand tactics to exploit sensitive political issues.

Both parties are intensifying their efforts to secure votes as the election approaches, especially in critical battleground states like Michigan, which was pivotal to Biden’s success in 2020.

Harris’ campaigners confirmed on Sunday they were embarking on the largest digital ad campaign in US political history, with plans to spend $370 million on television and digital advertising.

The development comes as Harris faces increased scrutiny over whether she will distance herself from Biden’s approach and take a tougher stance on Israel and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.


US-funded broadcaster Alhurra lays off 160 staff, merges Iraq channel

US-funded broadcaster Alhurra lays off 160 staff, merges Iraq channel
Updated 03 September 2024
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US-funded broadcaster Alhurra lays off 160 staff, merges Iraq channel

US-funded broadcaster Alhurra lays off 160 staff, merges Iraq channel
  • “We’ve said goodbye today to 160 of our colleagues. We’ve reduced our workforce by 21 percent,” MBN Acting President and CEO Dr. Jeffrey Gedmin said
  • “Congressionally mandated budget cuts have forced us to reduce company costs by nearly $20 million”

BAGHDAD: The parent company of US government-funded Arabic language broadcaster Alhurra has cut 160 jobs and is merging its Iraq channel after a 20 percent budget cut mandated by the US Congress, its CEO said in a note to staff.
“Today is a sad day. We’ve said goodbye today to 160 of our colleagues. We’ve reduced our workforce by 21 percent,” MBN Acting President and CEO Dr. Jeffrey Gedmin said in a note to staff on Monday.
“The moves we are making are obligatory. Congressionally mandated budget cuts have forced us to reduce company costs by nearly $20 million,” he said.
MBN comprises two satellite TV channels — Alhurra and Alhurra Iraq — as well as two radio stations and several websites.
Headquartered in the US state of Virginia, Alhurra began broadcasting in February 2004 as part of a US effort to connect with audiences in the Middle East amid rising anti-American sentiment following the 2003 US invasion of Iraq.
It aims to “accurately represent America, Americans, and American policies,” and engage in independent journalism, according to the MBN website.
MBN said it was merging Alhurra Iraq with Alhurra TV “to provide viewers with the best of both networks” and said “Iraq remains a priority — a vital part of the MBN region and ecosystem.”
A company spokesperson said 30 of the staff laid off were in Iraq and 130 were in other parts of the region and the US.
MBN said it was moving away from a costly brick-and-mortar presence and would instead prioritize multimedia journalism by employees while exploring new technologies, such as artificial intelligence.