Facebook deleting name of potential Trump whistleblower

Facebook has said it is deleting the name of the person identified in conservative circles as the whistleblower who triggered a congressional impeachment inquiry into US president Donald Trump’s actions.

Facebook deleting name of potential Trump whistleblower

Facebook has said it is deleting the name of the person identified in conservative circles as the whistleblower who triggered a congressional impeachment inquiry into US president Donald Trump’s actions.

The company said any mention of the potential whistleblower’s name violates Facebook’s “coordinating harm policy”, which prohibits material that could identify a “witness, informant, or activist”.

Facebook said it is removing mentions of the alleged whistleblower’s name and will revisit this decision if the name is widely published in the media or used by public figures in debate.

The policy is not new. Facebook said it has been applying it to the whistleblower case and removing the person’s name for a few days.

On Twitter, though, the alleged whistleblower’s name was circulating widely on Friday. The company does not have a policy against identifying whistleblowers by name and is not removing the posts.

Some of the stories identifying the person came from the conservative news site Breitbart, which Facebook counts as one of its news partners in a newly launched news section on its app.

However, the company said it was also removing identifying posts on the whistleblower from Breitbart.

In a statement, Twitter said it prohibits the sharing of “personally identifiable information about any individual, including the alleged whistleblower”.

But the company’s policy on such information does not consider a person’s name to be private information, a category that does include details such as a person’s address, contact information or medical records.

This is not the first time Twitter and Facebook have diverged on important policies.

Last week,

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US whistleblower laws exist to protect the identity and careers of people who bring forward accusations of wrongdoing by government officials. Members of congress in both parties have historically backed those protections.

So far, Mr Trump has avoided identifying the whistleblower by name. Exposing whistleblowers can be risky, even for a president. Doing so could be a violation of federal law.

While there is little chance Trump could face charges, revealing the name could give Democrats more impeachment fodder. It could also prompt a backlash among some senate Republicans who have long defended whistleblowers.

Amid all this, a false claim about the identity of the whistleblower has also been circulating online, with falsely captioned pictures being widely circulated widely on Twitter, Facebook and Reddit this week.

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