“Facebook on Sunday deleted the main page of the Myanmar military under...standards prohibiting the incitement of violence... a day after two protesters were killed when police opened fire at a demonstration against the Feb 1 coup.” | Reuters https://t.co/Ki2huFKDWc
— WatchingMyanmar (@WatchingMyanmar) February 21, 2021
Genuine question: So should this generate discussion about how tech companies have too much power to control the narrative in a country? https://t.co/af3a3teRON
— haritho (@haritho) February 21, 2021
"In line with our global policies, we’ve removed the Tatmadaw True News Information Team Page from Facebook for repeated violations of our Community Standards prohibiting incitement of violence and coordinating harm” https://t.co/Y1vkRyub1m
— Iain Levine (@iainlevine) February 21, 2021
Due to ongoing protest in Myanmar and military violence over civilians, #Facebook has deleted the main page of the Myanmar military prohibiting the incitement of violence. #Myanmarcoup @PravitR @drzarni @JusticeMyanmar https://t.co/sfAqLKggHw
— Military Monitor (@MilitaryMonitor) February 21, 2021
Facebook on Sunday deleted the main page of the Myanmar military under it standards prohibiting the incitement of violence, the company said, a day after two protesters were killed when police opened fire at a demonstration against the Feb 1 coup. https://t.co/4NJnk8Ui75
— ❤????❤️ (@moui) February 21, 2021
Facebook in recent years has engaged with civil rights activists and democratic political parties in Myanmar and pushed back against the military after coming under heavy international criticism for failing to contain online hate campaigns.
— Wa Lone (@walone4) February 21, 2021
https://t.co/DQxLw2yMNX
Following the last genocide, I'msurprised @Facebook allowed these pages to even exist. Does it only ever react to extreme situations where death occurs? It says it's not a publisher, but clearly it is exercising editorial judgment. https://t.co/dMoDPJuIPc
— Arvind Hickman (@ArvindHickman) February 21, 2021
FYI I gave them access to this list 2 days ago, why did I ever think playing nice with Facebook was a good idea?
— crash override (@donk_enby) February 21, 2021
But did @facebook let them keep their sockpuppets https://t.co/Eyv4nWvpY5
— Brooke Binkowski (@brooklynmarie) February 21, 2021
"Congratulations", Facebook, on finally getting around to pressing one button:https://t.co/g64STe9Lg8 https://t.co/EHssAUhUzC
— crash override (@donk_enby) February 21, 2021
Protestors in Myanmar mourned the death of 20-year-old Mya Thwet Thwet Khine, the first confirmed fatality in the ongoing protests against the military coup. https://t.co/0TZnXNERJe
— Morning Edition (@MorningEdition) February 22, 2021
If the Myanmar military hoped its show of strength would quell dissent, Mya Thwet Thwet Khine's death could very well lead to the opposite. https://t.co/NKOGtPAo12
— NPR (@NPR) February 22, 2021
As Myanmar Mourns Slain Protesters, Military Junta Threatens More Violence https://t.co/ioQ87pya09
— きなこ☆茶柱 (@ackaarmann) February 22, 2021
この霊柩車たぶん日本で走っていたのやね・・・。
An activist group that advocates for information transparency released a stash of documents, revealing the corporate ownership of around 120,000 registered companies in Myanmar on Saturday. https://t.co/uJ2BJOhWq1
— Stephanie Li (@Stephan94881584) February 22, 2021
@JusticeMyanmar also combed through the files on Saturday and located details of the structure and operations of MEHL, a conglomerate whose activities finances the country’s military. https://t.co/uJ2BJOhWq1
— Stephanie Li (@Stephan94881584) February 22, 2021
Massive data trove from 120,000 #Myanmar companies surface online in #Wikileaks-style release from #DDoSecrets https://t.co/1xfxRZ0fnh
— Emma Best ?️?? Mx. Yzptlk (@NatSecGeek) February 22, 2021
“Facebook on Sunday deleted the main page of the Myanmar military under...standards prohibiting the incitement of violence... a day after two protesters were killed when police opened fire at a demonstration against the Feb 1 coup.” | Reuters https://t.co/Ki2huFKDWc
— WatchingMyanmar (@WatchingMyanmar) February 21, 2021
As Myanmar Mourns Slain Protesters, Military Junta Threatens More Violence https://t.co/X6pMVl6GpM
— Jim Clancy (@ClancyReports) February 22, 2021
#OpMyanmar ??: #Anonymous that advocates for information transparency released a stash of documents, revealing the corporate ownership of around 120,000 registered companies in Myanmar on Saturday.
— Anonymous ? T. Colombia ? (@AnonNews_Col) February 22, 2021
The documents, dubbed “Myanmar Financials” https://t.co/96snPcSHtG