> Facebook does have a process for getting things like this fixed very quickly
Maybe that's true for some things, but the community standard violation/restriction code seems like it's always been a mess, every fix breaks something else, every new FB feature makes it fail in new ways, and there's no real motivation to make it good (who cares about violators, right?).
I feel it's so bad because because it's been constantly patched under pressure every time media catches on something on the platform (e.g. after the livestream of the Christchurch shooting, FB started handing out livestreaming restrictions like candy for every minor violation, and to my knowledge it stayed like that until today). I honestly would love to see the code like I love to watch terrible movies.
It's so consistently and innovatively bad, and I have such a hard time thinking nobody violating CS has friends at FB, that the unmaintainable mess is the only explanation I can find.
Maybe that's true for some things, but the community standard violation/restriction code seems like it's always been a mess, every fix breaks something else, every new FB feature makes it fail in new ways, and there's no real motivation to make it good (who cares about violators, right?).
I feel it's so bad because because it's been constantly patched under pressure every time media catches on something on the platform (e.g. after the livestream of the Christchurch shooting, FB started handing out livestreaming restrictions like candy for every minor violation, and to my knowledge it stayed like that until today). I honestly would love to see the code like I love to watch terrible movies.
It's so consistently and innovatively bad, and I have such a hard time thinking nobody violating CS has friends at FB, that the unmaintainable mess is the only explanation I can find.