Portal de comentarios públicos

Account Ban for Targeting Public Figures 

20 de enero de 2026 Caso seleccionado
3 de febrero de 2026 Comentarios públicos cerrados
4 de junio de 2026 Decisión publicada
Próximo Meta implementa la decisión

Comentarios


nombre
Jalen Alvarez-Vasquez
organización
Penn State University
país
United States
idioma
English

I am submitting this comment to emphasize the importance of proportional enforcement, due process, and meaningful appeal pathways when Meta permanently disables user accounts.
Permanent account suspension is one of the most severe penalties a platform can impose. For many users, accounts serve as social, professional, academic, and economic tools. When accounts are disabled, the impact extends beyond content moderation — affecting reputation, networking, income opportunities, and personal identity.
To ensure fairness, Meta should prioritize:
Clear and specific explanations of violations, rather than vague enforcement notices.
Graduated enforcement, allowing users a genuine opportunity to correct mistakes before permanent penalties.
Human review in high-impact cases, especially when an account shows no pattern of malicious intent.
Accessible, transparent appeal processes, including timelines, evidence review, and the opportunity to contextualize content.
Punitive enforcement alone does not necessarily reduce harmful behavior. Research and platform experience suggest that education, warnings, and corrective tools are often more effective than permanent bans in shaping responsible online behavior.
Permanent account removal should be reserved for clear, repeated, and intentional abuse that presents real-world safety risks — not isolated incidents, misunderstandings, or minor policy infractions.
Meta has the opportunity to set an industry standard by balancing safety with fairness, accountability, and rehabilitation. I urge the Board to recommend reforms that increase transparency, reduce wrongful disablements, and protect users from disproportionate enforcement.

Descripción del caso

Account Ban for Targeting Public Figures 

Today, the Board is announcing new cases for consideration. As part of this, we invite people and organizations to submit public comments by using the button below. 

Case Selection 

As we cannot hear every appeal, the Board prioritizes cases that have the potential to affect lots of users around the world, are of critical importance to public discourse or raise important questions about Meta’s policies. 

 

The cases that we are announcing today are: 

Account Ban for Targeting Public Figures 

2026-006-IG-MR, 2026-007-IG-MR, 2026-08-IG-MR, 2026-009-IG-MR, 2026-0010-IG-MR
Meta Referrals
Submit a public comment using the button below 

 

The Board will assess whether Meta was right to permanently disable a user account, following a referral in which the company requested guidance from the Board. This is the first time the Board has taken a case on Meta's approach to permanently disabling accounts – an urgent concern for Meta’s users. It represents a significant opportunity to provide users with greater transparency on Meta’s account enforcement policies and practices, make recommendations for improvement, and expand the types of cases the Board can review.   

In 2025, Meta permanently disabled a widely followed Instagram account for repeatedly violating the company’s Community Standards. Meta referred its decision to the Board, pointing to the challenges of respecting political speech while following its account disablement rules when users engage in patterns of abuse, including against public figures and for threats against female journalists. 

Meta referred five posts made in the year before they permanently disabled the Instagram account. Multiple posts included visual threats of violence and harassment against a female journalist. Other posts featured anti-gay slurs against prominent politicians and content depicting a sex act, alleging misconduct against minorities. Meta determined that the posts violated the Violence and IncitementBullying and HarassmentHateful Conduct, and Adult Nudity and Sexual Activity Community Standards. The company removed each post from the platform and applied a strike to the account after each violation. 

The account came to the attention of Meta staff, who reported it to the company's internal experts for review. They determined that the account demonstrated a persistent pattern of repeated violations of the company’s policies over the previous year and posed a safety risk, as some of the referred posts called for violence that could lead to death. While the account had not yet accrued enough strikes to be automatically disabled, this risk, combined with the account’s multiple violations of Meta’s policies, led to the decision to permanently disable the account. 

Meta’s Account Integrity policy notes that the company may disable accounts that persistently violate its policies, and in its referral, the company explained that it also disables accounts that demonstrate a clear intent to violate its policies. Meta noted that decisions to disable accounts can also be made outside of the strike system on a case-by-case basis, considering a user’s behavior and activity. 

The Board would appreciate public comments that address: 

  • How best to ensure due process and fairness to people whose accounts are penalized or permanently disabled. 
  • The effectiveness of measures used by social media platforms to protect public figures and journalists from accounts engaged in repeated abuse and threats of violence, in particular against women in the public eye.  
  • Challenges in identifying and considering off-platform context when assessing threats against public figures and journalists. 
  • Research into the efficacy of punitive measures to shape online behaviors, and the efficacy of alternative or complementary interventions. 
  • Good industry practices in transparency reporting on account enforcement decisions and related appeals. 

In its decisions, the Board can issue policy recommendations to Meta. While recommendations are not binding, Meta must respond to them within 60 days. As such, the Board welcomes public comments proposing recommendations that are relevant to these cases. 

Public Comments  

If you or your organization feel you can contribute valuable perspectives that can help with reaching a decision on the cases announced today, you can submit your contributions using the button below. Please note that public comments can be provided anonymously. The public comment window is open for 14 days, closing at 23.59 Pacific Standard Time (PST) on Tuesday, 3 February.  

What’s Next  

Over the next few weeks, Board Members will be deliberating these cases. Once they have reached their decision, we will post it on the Decisions page.