Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg investigated in Germany for allowing hate speech

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and three other executives are being investigated by German prosecutors following a complaint they broke national laws against by failing to remove offensive posts. File photo by Terry Schmitt/UPI | License Photo

BERLIN, Nov. 6 (UPI) — Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and three other executives are being investigated by German prosecutors over allegations they broke national hate speech laws by failing to remove offensive posts.

Lawyer Chan-jo Jun accuses Facebook of tolerating hate speech, Holocaust denial and calls to murder or violence, which are banned in Germany, Der Spiegel reported. The complaint lists 438 posts not deleted by Facebook despite repeated requests by users.

Prosecutors in Munich then launched legal action.

Also sued are Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer; Richard Allan, Facebook’s European policy director, and Eva-Maria Kirschsieper, head of public policy in Berlin.

German law bans hate speech targeting groups, glorification of the Nazi regime and Holocaust denial.

Justice Minister Heiko Maas said he would take legal measures if the company doesn’t comply by March by its demand to deal with hate speech.

In the past, he has threatened Facebook and Twitter with being “too slow” in removing offensive posts.

Previously in Hamburg, prosecutors failed to sue Facebook because the company’s not under German jurisdiction.

Facebook said it works to fight hate speech online.

“We are not commenting on the status of a possible investigation but we can say that the allegations lack merit and there has been no violation of German law by Facebook or its employees,” a company spokesman said to The Jerusalem Post.

On Thursday, Zuckerberg, the fifth richest person in the world with a $52 billion fortune, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, lost $3 billion Thursday after executives suggested Facebook probably won’t be able to keep up with its explosive growth much longer. On Wednesday, the Menlo, Calif.,-based company reported third-quarter sales increased 56 percent to $7.01 billion.

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