Facebook faces pressure from the public to clean up after being accused of slowing down over false posts regarding Covid jab.

  • The social media company failed to take action on almost two out of three misleading posts
  • In correspondence between Oliver Dowden, Nick Clegg, the figures appeared
  • Facebook stated that it replied ‘within hours” to all Government reports










Facebook was under fresh pressure to ‘clean up its act’ last night amid claims it dragged its feet over false posts about Covid jabs.

Social media company was furious for failing to correct nearly all three of its misleading posts in 48 hours.

The numbers were found in unpublished correspondence between Oliver Dowden (former Culture Secretary) and Nick Clegg, Facebook’s chief spin doctor and former Deputy Prime Minister.

The figures emerged in previously unpublished correspondence between former Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden and Facebook chief spin doctor Nick Clegg, the former Deputy Prime Minister and ex-Liberal Democrat leader, pictured in 2019

These figures were discovered in correspondence previously unseen between Oliver Dowden, former Culture Secretary, and Nick Clegg (Facebook chief spin doctor and former Deputy Prime minister, ex-Liberal Democrat leader).

Writing in November last year, Mr Dowden complained that since March 2020, Facebook only responded within 48 hours of his department ‘flagging misleading posts’ in just 30 per cent of cases.

The requests came from his department’s misinformation unit, which tells social media platforms when it identifies ‘dangerous and incorrect claims about the virus’.

Facebook took issue with the figures, claiming it responded ‘within hours’ to most reports from the Government.

Mr Dowden wrote in November complained that since March 2020, Facebook only responded within 48 hours of his department ¿flagging misleading posts¿ in just 30 per cent of cases.

Writing in November last year, Oliver Dowden, pictured in November this year, complained that since March 2020, Facebook only responded within 48 hours of his department ‘flagging misleading posts’ in just 30 per cent of cases.

It said the 30 per cent figure related to the number of times content was actually taken down – not the number of times Facebook responded.

Julian Knight, chairman of the Commons digital, culture, media and sport committee, insisted Facebook had to ‘clean up its act’ and respond promptly to misleading posts ‘99.9 per cent’ of the time.

Mr Clegg, who reportedly earns £2.7million a year, praised the ‘increased tempo of engagement’ with the Government.

Facebook took issue with the figures, claiming it responded ¿within hours¿ to most reports from the Government (file photo)

Facebook took issue with the figures, claiming it responded ‘within hours’ to most reports from the Government (file photo)

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