Meta recently delivered its quite polished "Human Rights Repoirt: Insights and Actions 2020-2021" (Meta Report), which it made available to anyone interested in delving through its 83 pages of polished text and even more polished photos.
In March of 2021, Meta adopted its Human Rights Policy in which we commit to reporting annually on how we are addressing our human rights impacts, including relevant insights arising from human rights due diligence, and the actions we are taking in response. This is our first annual report, covering our learnings and progress from January 1, 2020 through December 31, 2021. The scope of this report is Meta Platforms, Inc. (formerly known as Facebook, Inc.) and our assessment of what we consider to be the company’s salient human rights risks, defined by the scale, scope, irremediable character and likelihood of impact. Our salience assessments are complemented by an additional materiality assessment included in Meta’s 2021 Sustainability Report. This report is inspired by Principle 15 of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights which makes it clear that companies must “know and show” that they respect human rights.
The reaction from important sectors of the non-governmental community was not unexpected. It had that rehearsed quality of an opinion merely waiting for the predicate action to occur in order for it to be delivered. "After the publication of Meta's report, digital rights defenders and the media outlets criticised the company for failing to address key human rights concerns around content moderation, hate speech and misinformation." (here) In this case, though, the tepid response may serve as a window to larger issues in the context of human rights engagements by business within the structures of current expectations. These are not issues of or critiques about the way that Meta may have deviated from one form of another of an ideal human rights report, even one adhering to the letter and spirit of the UN Guiding Principles (as they attempted here). Instead they point to a more fundamental set of challenges--semiotic challenges--about the way that human rights is now performed within chains of global production.
"Awesome collectibles" Pix Credit here |
Foot Reliquary of St Blaise; pix credit here |
Once that rationalizing premise is accepted one is sucked into the lifeworld of the Human Rights Report. And that is where most people start and stop. One engages with the object as object, and one thus becomes bound within the rules and expectations of its "objectivity"--one does go beyond the object--rather one approaches the object to judge it as against some conception of the perfect object it ought to have been. And one does that within the logic that produced the object itself. These are then "inside" jobs the value of which is to protect the sensibilities and lenses through which the analytic exercise is undertaken. And one can almost program a system to write a critique simply by imputing the critical elements of the ideal embraced by a critical community and them measuring the distance between that ideal and what is preferred in the Human Rights Report object. While is binary is critically important in defining the relationship between large entities producing Human Rights Reports as defensive objects, and human rights collectives seeking to project their vision of perfection within the operational life of the defensive entity, it may be less useful for any other objective.
Pix Credit here |
Nonetheless, the principal content of the vessel are text and pictures--the representation of thoughts, analysis and facts (producing an image of the past, the present, and the future). They are meant to evoke response as well as to give meaning. They are the objects that reassure, excite, comfort, enrage, enlighten, and describe a meaning universe within which they are situated and within which they situate the reader/viewer.
The character, and power, of these pictures and text are evident from the first (cover) page of the Human Rights Report. The images are meant to reassure, to show concern, to create feelings of safety, warmth and protection. The graphics are meant to reassure--to explain, and to guide the reader to appropriate ends. It almost doesn't matter what is depicted--it is the emotive response that is important. And indeed, from the perspective of the content of the Human Rights Report, the images do appear delightfully random. But to students of visual stimulation, to Nietzsche's prototypical "psychologist"--they are potent objects, the signification of which is meant to reinforce the undertones of meaning conveyed in the text and info-graphics conveniently provided.
If the imagery is emotive, the text is not. If one could sum its direction, that sum would approach zero. The text both is suggestive but also cautious. It makes statements that it then suggests have precisely little effect. It gives the appearance of certainty and direction and then walks that back in provisos, exceptions, and ambiguity. It is meant to evoke compliance without giving a potential litigant much to draw on for the interposition of a lawsuit. . . anywhere. Text is object and process of mummification. It is the linen that is used to wrap the body of information after the vital organs have been extracted and placed in the ceremonial vessels depicted in the imagery.
pix credit here |
Beyond that, there are general statements of overarching goals, and a limited number of heroic examples. Text and image here assume a wholly qualitative character. But that is what the underlying ideology values--a textual expression of fidelity to the governing ideology and its key texts; statements expressing the way in which such textual declaration of fidelity are them transposed to operational text; and examples of the way that it can work. Text provides another form of imagery. They describe in very general terms the translation of ideology and principles into goals. in the process text becomes as emotive as the images that accompany it. One is invited to infer; and one is managed into a positive state of mind by the detailed histories of triumph. Nonetheless, operational systemic is not very much on display. It is technical; it is boring; and its precise description can produce a basis for liability. Consider in this light footnote 5 on Meta Report page 24 with respect to HRIA's (human Rights Impact Assessments, especially purchased from 3rd party providers):
05. For more on HRIAs, see Part 02.II of this report. Meta’s reference in this Report to third party diligence assessments cannot be construed as admission, agreement with, or acceptance of any of the findings, conclusions, opinions or viewpoints identified in those assessments, or the methodology that was employed to reach such findings, conclusions, opinions or viewpoints. Likewise, while Meta references steps it has taken, or plans to take, which may correlate to points assessors raised or recommendations they made, these also cannot be deemed an admission, agreement with, or acceptance of any findings, conclusions, opinions or viewpoints.
pic credit here |
So, what precisely does Meta have to say about human rights due diligence (Meta Report, p. 24)? First, that HRDD reflects the suggestion of the UNGPs (¶17) and that it instructs companies creating regimes of HRDD to prioritize their actions. One can infer from that Meta will strive to adhere to the formal structuring of HRDD, but that it assumes flexibility in its implementation grounded in company specific assessments of priority, and sensitive to the need to avoid actions that produce liability (an intimation discussed above). Second, HRDD is a historically evolving process reflecting Meta's assessment of what pinches most. Third, that the modalities of human rights due diligence can be procured by vendors better able to provide the service. The current high end form of this procurement policy are HRIA--a methodological baseline that also evolves as priorities and technology changes. The most interesting aspect of that, of course, is that human rights is disaggregated from other parts of the production process. It remains exogenous--an effect that must be prevented, mitigated, and remedies, rather than one that must be embedded as a component in the production of the goods and services that Meta sells. Meta is not wrong--and the NGO community has itself, in part, to blame for the strategic exploitation of this approach. Having made human rights special, companies cannot be faulted for treating it as special. And in this case special means something that sits outside of production though with effects on it and its consumption. The resulting interaction, of course, ought to be frustrating to those who wish for embedding but who cannot grasp the relationship between embedding and the commodification of human rights in the way that labor is commodified. This is a conundrum that merits substantial discussion and reform--but that is hardly to be undertaken on the pages of the Meta Report.
pix credit here |
Fourth, HRDD appears to be organized territoriality. That is useful, for example, when one must deal with states with quite different legal regimes affecting human rights. But it also provides a way of disaggregating human rights so that what is important in one place becomes impossible in another--the universality of human rights is lost--except in the rhetorical flourishes of parts of the Meta Report. Fifth, HRDD is also an alert system used to detect potential crises. That is precisely how the system is supposed to work, of course. Yet it does not suggest the sensitivities involved in the construction of such systems based on the devouring and analysis of data. And, indeed, one of the most interesting aspects of the Meta Report is the way that the quantitative measures that must underlie much of the system it speaks to lies beneath the qualitative text of the Meta Report itself. One has very little sense of the quantitative measures used, the systems for data protection and integrity, and the assumptions and use of data analytics. It is there, to be sure, in part--but one must follow the right hyperlinks. Sixth, transparency and assessment is incorporated in Meta's HRDD. That is necessary and important to be sure. The machinery for transparency is complicated--and requires substantial investment in technology and in the capacity to use it--beyond the ability to write on someone's "wall" in "Facebook." That no doubt is a future challenge. More pressing, though, may be the difficulty of penetrating the immense bureaucratic structures built around the projects of monitoring, and assessment--either of substantive assessment within the operation of the operations of the company, or assessment of the ways in which those processes function. As a result--both assessment and accountability--internal and external--remain an elite project and one populated by insiders. It is thus no surprise that the entirely of the HRDD process might be challenged as captured in the sense that a small group of highly networked individuals operating in the same socio-political space seem to be the key or only participants in the process.
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These are the impression that may be possible as one reads through the Meta Report. At least those are the impressions the Meta Report made on me. Others may read the Report differently. If read like I have, one comes away from the Meta Report visually stimulated ans textually dulled. One appreciates the extraordinary attention to formal constitution of systems and the veiling of the quantitative measures tat may or ought to be used to drive the system. The human rights due diligence system conforms to expectation. It supplies exactly what its outside stakeholders crave--stories. HRDD within the parameters if qualitative structures of transparency and compliance is ultimately reduced to storytelling; and the spinning of stories is precisely the great task to which the Meta Report is pointed. Not that storytelling is unimportant--quite the opposite: storytelling is the way in which societal structures and self knowledge are built. It is the way that the great movements in social expectations--in its consciousness and valuation of its components and in the construction of its behavior taboos are built--one story at a time. Courts tell stories (discussed here). And the lessons of stories are the building blocks for legitimate exercises of administrative discretion. That is the essence of a qualitative system built on the exercise of discretionary authority by an agent outside of the processes that are to be examined and judged and against which the authority of the administrator-prosecutor--judge, is to be applied.
One understands that the bedrock of the system is qualitative. And that qualitative systems rely on the ancient administrative-bureaucratic model of operation. The Facebook Oversight Board is one such incarnation of that ideology. These entities are constituted to serve as
Chroniclers in the Field of Cultural Production. That such a system relies on the production of large vats of rules which are then administered by a system of external (that is of external to users) officials. These officials include regulators, investigators, assessors, judges and enforcers. It works the way the modern bureaucratic administrative state operates--but one designed to maximize administrative measures and minimize liability. That is reassuring but also frustrating. Operating a platform, and embedding human rights into systems, may not be particularly successful, where it is based on a system that externalizes human rights. But that is a choice that appears to have been embraced by key actors on all sides of the issue. As a consequence, one can expect HRDD to reflect this externalization. It follows that the criticisms of the Meta Report are both unremarkable but also inevitable given the guiding principles within which such systems are built. One is then left with production values--emotive images, careful text, and an object that is meant symbolically to declare fidelity to a project the implementation of which is constrained by its own framework. One goes back to the human rights report as a ritual vessel--a reliquary for human rights.
The Executive Summary follows:
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