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Facebook agrees to help Vietnamese gov't manage online environment

DA NANG Today
Published: April 27, 2017

Facebook has pledged to cooperate with the Vietnamese government to block ‘bad’ and ‘toxic’ content on the country's most popular social network, according to a post on the government website.

A man is silhouetted against a video screen with a Facebook logo. Photo by Reuters/Dado Ruvic
A man is silhouetted against a video screen with a Facebook logo. Photo by Reuters/Dado Ruvic

The agreement was made at a meeting on Wednesday between Viet Nam’s Information Minister Truong Minh Tuan and Monika Bickert, Facebook’s head of policy management.

Bickert said the network is willing to cooperate with the Vietnamese government so its platform complies with Vietnamese laws and to help build a safe and healthy internet environment in Viet Nam, the government report said.

The network said it will start by removing fake pages that purport to belong to state leaders.  It also said it will establish a special channel to receive management requests from the Vietnamese government.

Facebook is the most popular social network in Viet Nam with around 35 million users, or 70% of the country’s online community.

In recent years, the government has taken various steps to embrace the platform. Viet Nam’s health minister launched her official Facebook page more than 2 years ago to provide health information and receive questions from the public.  That was months before Viet Nam’s national government opened its own Facebook page in October 2015.

The then Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung urged government officials to embrace social networks, saying "we won’t be able to ban them."

But in recent months, the government has been working hard to control what it calls ‘toxic’ information.

In January, the information ministry issued a circular asking Facebook and similar sites with a Vietnamese base of over one million users to ‘collaborate’ with authorities to block ‘toxic information,’ ranging from ads for banned products to anti-state content and state secrets.

It has asked Google to block and remove 2,200 videos on YouTube that contained ‘slanderous’ and ‘defamatory’ content against Vietnamese leaders.  Google had removed nearly 1,300 such videos as of April 12.

Tuan also suggested that Viet Nam needs homegrown social networks “to replace and compete with Facebook”.

(Source: VnExpress International)

 

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