Facebook Briefly Blocks Netanyahu Chatbot On Election Day

Reuters
By Reuters
September 18, 2019International
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Facebook Briefly Blocks Netanyahu Chatbot On Election Day
Two giant Israeli Likud Party election banners hanging from a building showing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shaking hands with US President Donald Trump (L) and Russian President Vladimir Putin, with a caption above reading in Hebrew "Netanyahu, in another league", in the coastal Mediterranean city of Tel Aviv, on July 28, 2019. (JACK GUEZ/AFP/Getty Images)

JERUSALEM—Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lashed out at Facebook on Sept. 17 after the social network blocked a “chatbot” from his right-wing Likud party’s account for violating election day rules.

The function, a type of automated software that simulates a conversation with a user, was running again within a few hours.

“They took a 100 kg hammer and brought it down on a fly, because it is a Likud fly,” Netanyahu said in a video posted on social media. “They shut down our means of communication with our voters.”

NTD Photo
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) chairs the weekly cabinet meeting at his office in Jerusalem on July 7, 2019, accompanied by cabinet secretary Tzachi Braverman (R) and Foreign Minister Yisrael Katz (L). (ABIR SULTAN/AFP/Getty Images)

Israel’s Central Elections Committee said the chatbot had been used to publish poll data in contravention of regulations.

Netanyahu appeared to play down the violation, saying: “Someone published a small poll on Facebook.”

The problematic posts were apparently taken down and no longer appeared on his Facebook page.

Netanyahu, who is battling for his political career, has been trying to mobilize his base by warning them of low supporter turnout.

Asked about its intervention on Netanyahu’s account, Facebook said in a statement it works with “elections commissions around the world to help protect the integrity of elections.”

“Our policies clearly state developers are required to comply with all applicable laws in the country where their app is available. We have restricted this bot for violating local law until the polling stations are closed tonight,” it said.

Clearing the way for Facebook to reinstate the chatbot, Judge Hanan Melcer, chairman of the Israeli Central Elections Committee, said he received an assurance from Likud that no further poll data would be published on it.

By Dan Williams and Ari Rabinovitch

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