I find I have to measure my words very carefully on Facebook to not trigger the 
pro Zionist bias of its censors.    Charles


How a Secretive Cyber Unit Censors Palestinians - The American Prospect
 
How a Secretive Cyber Unit Censors Palestinians
The Israeli government’s ‘invisible handshake’ with Facebook silences 
speech—without recourse or accountability.BY LUKE GOLDSTEIN  JULY 12, 2021
ALEXANDER POHL/SIPA USA VIA AP IMAGESSocial media users who shared content 
about expulsions of Palestinians from the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh 
Jarrah reported that their accounts have been censored or suspended. Ahmad 
Barakat has spent the past five years of his life trying to understand how 
social media companies think. He’s a digital marketing consultant based in 
Jerusalem who specializes in helping his Palestinian clientele, ranging from 
entrepreneurs to activists, avoid shadow bans or content removals on social 
media platforms. It’s a service in high demand. Widespread censorship has 
plagued users across the Arabic-speaking world because of translation errors 
and biases in the algorithms. Barakat’s social media accounts have attracted 
thousands of followers who go to him for tips on how to get their messages past 
Facebook’s content moderation. His job is to try and crack open the black box 
of the companies’ algorithms without setting off any trip wires, which can be a 
bit like walking across a minefield wearing scuba fins.“It often feels like 
there’s a complete randomness to how it works,” said Barakat, 35, during a 
phone call over Signal, an encrypted messaging service used by many 
Palestinians as a more private alternative to Facebook-owned WhatsApp.During 
the 11-day war that broke out between Hamas and Israel in May, Barakat saw a 
spike in content removals of his clients as well as journalists and Palestinian 
activists. Just before the May 21 cease-fire, Barakat posted on his Facebook 
wall a screenshot of an account that had been suspended for content violation; 
his post flagged keywords that may have set off the algorithm. He’d been doing 
this regularly during the recent conflict and over the previous few days. 
Within minutes, Facebook notified him that it had suspended his account 
temporarily for violating the “community standards.” He was restricted from the 
social media platform’s full functionality for two months.
A collection of civil society groups has documented a rise in content removals 
targeting Palestinians.
This suspension wasn’t just a minor inconvenience for Barakat. He runs most of 
his business through Facebook and needs access to the social media behemoth so 
he can put out ads for his clients or host live videos. After trying to appeal 
the decision and never getting a response, he had to hire a contractor to 
publish ads on his behalf.The social media blackouts of Palestinian accounts 
during the protests in May were just the most recent case in a pattern that’s 
emerged over the last several years. A collection of civil society groups has 
documented a rise in content removals targeting Palestinians. Oftentimes, the 
problem lies in translation issues. In many other cases, the account 
suspensions are prompted by more politically motivated reasons, such as 
Facebook’s internal content moderation policy on the word “Zionism,” which 
conflates any criticism of the political ideology with anti-Semitism.And while 
flaws in algorithms and content moderation are concerning, Barakat and many 
other Palestinians have become increasingly alarmed that there may be Israeli 
government pressure or direct involvement by the state behind many of these 
removals. They point to Israel’s Cyber Unit, a small but powerful program 
within the Ministry of Justice, which refers thousands of online posts every 
year to social media platforms to be taken down.“What’s happening on social 
media platforms is reflecting broader power relations, and it’s suppressing the 
Palestinian narrative,” said Nadim Nashif, the director and co-founder of the 
nonprofit 7amleh, the Arab Center for Social Media Advancement.ISRAEL FOUNDED 
THE CYBER UNIT in 2015 as a focal point of the state’s efforts to combat cyber 
crime and online terrorism. It’s also become a de facto censor of social media 
platforms. The scale of its operation has ballooned from a few hundred removal 
requests during the first year of its operation to around 20,000 in 2019, 
according to the Office of the State Attorney’s annual reports (the Cyber Unit 
hasn’t released its numbers yet for 2020).Social media companies have also 
become far more cooperative with these government takedown requests. Platforms 
complied with the Unit in over 90 percent of cases in 2019, compared to 70 
percent in 2016. Eighty-seven percent of removal requests go to Facebook, which 
is the most widely used platform in Israel and Palestine. Over the course of 
the 11 days of violence, mass protests, and general strikes in May, the Unit’s 
referral numbers rose by 700 percent, according to a report the Unit released 
on May 19. Facebook’s compliance rate was down, but other platforms like TikTok 
were more cooperative than usual."Human rights lawyers and watchdog groups are 
closely monitoring the dramatic expansion of the Cyber Unit. They see it as 
part of an alarming trend. A growing number of EU countries as well as the 
United Kingdom have adopted Internet Referral Units—similar to Israel’s Cyber 
Unit—to crack down on online terrorism, disinformation, and other issues of 
online governance.Watchdogs say that this coordination between governments and 
online platforms lacks transparency and operates through an alternative 
enforcement mechanism that denies due process of law. In the vast majority of 
cases, the Cyber Unit doesn’t file a court order based on Israeli criminal law 
and go through the traditional legal process to take down online posts. 
Instead, the Unit makes appeals to the platform’s content moderation policies 
and community standards. The enforcement of these policies though can be 
selective, devoid of different cultural contexts, and flexible to the interests 
of the powerful.
Watchdogs say that coordination between governments and online platforms lacks 
transparency and operates through an alternative enforcement mechanism that 
denies due process.
In effect, governments that use Internet Referral Units outsource judicial 
power to private platforms, a tactic that legal experts call the “invisible 
handshake,” a new spin on the invisible hand of the market. Israeli legal 
scholars Niva Elkin-Koren and Michael Birnhack coined the term two decades ago 
in a white paper predicting an informal agreement that would develop between 
democratic nations and internet companies. The state would pressure or 
incentivize private platforms to carry out actions that the government would 
not have legal cover to do, such as censoring political dissent.The invisible 
handshake has subjected Barakat and thousands of online users to an 
increasingly erratic and Kafkaesque legal apparatus that threatens civil 
liberties. When users like Barakat have their online speech taken down, they 
have a very limited legal recourse to appeal the decision (the Facebook 
Oversight Board only takes up a handful of cases per year). They also have no 
way of knowing if state action was behind their removal.Two Israeli civil 
rights organizations challenged the legal basis of the Cyber Unit on exactly 
these grounds in a Supreme Court case decided just weeks before the protests 
broke out. The court rejected the petition because the plaintiffs couldn’t 
point to specific examples of constitutional violations by the Cyber Unit. 
Legal scholars in Israel and the U.S. saw this part of the ruling as a weak 
argument since the opaque dealings of the Unit were the very basis for the 
petition.BARAKAT ENTERED DIGITAL CONSULTING a decade ago because he saw that 
the digital market was going to be the market of the future. He wanted to help 
Palestinians get ahead in the new economy by learning how to use social media 
as a business tool.The global reach of these platforms opened up new 
opportunities for Palestinians that hadn’t existed in other parts of the 
digital world. Israel maintained control over the information and 
communications technology infrastructure in the Palestinian territories and had 
leveraged that power to restrict Palestinian telecommunications companies and 
service providers. Israel’s Communications Ministry repeatedly blocked the 
imports of necessary equipment for Palestinian companies to upgrade their 
service and limited broadband expansions into Gaza. Most areas of Palestine 
still don’t have access to 4G broadband. Residents often face higher costs for 
mobile and internet use, according to the United Nations and World Bank.Across 
the Middle East and especially in the Palestinian territories, social media 
also quickly became a political tool. Activists used its platforms to promote 
Palestinian voices to a wider audience—and to organize protests. For a moment 
during the Arab Spring, it looked like the synergy between online platforms, 
web users, and governments could be a democratizing force.But the balance of 
power shifted in Israel around 2015 after a wave of stabbings and car-rammings 
were carried out across Israel by lone-wolf actors with no clear affiliations 
to terrorist groups. The Israeli government believed the uncoordinated nature 
of these attacks could be traced to social media activity. The Netanyahu 
administration blamed Facebook.“What has been going on is due to the 
combination of the internet and Islamist extremism. It has been Osama bin Laden 
meets Mark Zuckerberg,” said then–Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.The 
lone-wolf attacks became the pretext for a multiyear public-pressure campaign 
by the Netanyahu administration to make Facebook bend to its will. The 
government also began implementing a new cybersecurity agenda that it had been 
developing for several years to shore up national-security priorities in 
cyberspace. Netanyahu initiated new programs like the National Cyber 
Directorate. Agencies started using a predictive-policing algorithm to crack 
down on online incitements to violence. As part of this new cyber strategy, the 
government created the Cyber Unit within the Ministry of Justice to deal 
directly with social media companies. The Unit operates like a sieve for all 
the content-removal requests gathered by other departments. After taking in 
thousands of posts flagged by military and intelligence agencies, the Cyber 
Unit in some instances works with the State Attorney’s office to file a court 
order. In the overwhelming majority of cases, though, the Unit opts for an 
alternative route, according to their annual reports. They send posts directly 
to social media companies using a priority back channel and lobby for their 
removal.
What’s clear is that Israel has considerable influence over the social media 
company’s internal decisions and Palestinians simply don’t.
The Israeli human rights organization Adalah started following the Cyber Unit’s 
practices when it only handled a few hundred cases a year. The Unit caught 
their attention when then–Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked said that 95 percent 
of their referrals were related to incitement of Palestinian violence. Adalah’s 
legal experts quickly identified that the Unit operates through an 
invisible-handshake agreement with private platforms that violates Israeli 
constitutional protections as well as human rights by stifling free speech and 
due process.“We’re facing the privatization of judicial authority and the 
subordination of rights,” said Rabea Eghbariah, the lead attorney for Adalah, 
who argued its case against the Cyber Unit before Israel’s Supreme Court.When 
Adalah sent letters to the Unit in 2017 asking for them to clarify the legality 
of these removals, the Cyber Unit claimed that their referrals didn’t 
constitute state action. The Unit’s director, Haim Vismonsky, argued that the 
referrals were merely suggestions for social media companies to deal with at 
their discretion, which wasn’t any different than when an ordinary user reports 
a post.Adalah disagreed. The Israeli government could regulate, litigate, or 
increase taxes on these platforms at the stroke of a pen. The “voluntary” 
nature of these requests seemed beyond parody.As the number of requests the 
Unit sent to platforms climbed rapidly each year, so did the compliance rate of 
Facebook and other internet companies, from 70 percent in 2016 to over 90 
percent in 2019, according to the Office of the State Attorney’s annual 
reports. At the same time, several pieces of legislation that threatened to 
regulate online platforms were making their way through the Israeli parliament. 
One bill, known as the Facebook Law, would have required greater oversight of 
the company’s content moderation. Facebook sent out a team of lobbyists to 
fight the bill. Since Facebook has an incorporated subsidiary in Israel, the 
parliament has also frequently entertained threats of higher taxation to punish 
the company. As Israeli law professor and cybersecurity expert Yuval Shany sees 
it, the company had every reason to comply with Cyber Unit requests to stymie 
future regulatory action.“The current arrangement is just as comfortable for 
Facebook as it is for the state, so they want to avoid any regulation,” said 
Shany, who directs Hebrew University’s Federmann Cyber Security Center.What’s 
clear is that Israel has considerable influence over the social media company’s 
internal decisions and Palestinians simply don’t. As one of the world’s centers 
for tech innovation, Israeli officials have built close ties with Facebook. 
Jordana Cutler, Facebook’s head of policy for Israel and the Jewish Diaspora, 
was a former adviser to Netanyahu. When Facebook selected the judges to sit on 
its newly minted Oversight Board this past year, they picked Emi Palmor, who 
was the head of Israel’s Ministry of Justice when the Cyber Unit was set up.The 
movement for freedom of information in Israel also started paying close 
attention to the Cyber Unit because of its lack of transparency. The Cyber Unit 
only reports the number of removal requests they send to social media 
companies, but not the substance of those posts, outside of broad categories 
like terrorism or copyright infringement. Since the Unit records a limited 
paper trail, there’s no accountability mechanism to evaluate when the 
government may be violating protected speech.“We have no way of knowing how the 
state handles these requests, and whether there’s selective enforcement or 
other infringement of rights at play,” said Dana Yaffe, the director of the 
Clinic on Digital Rights and Human Rights in Cyberspace at Hebrew 
University.The Cyber Unit has on occasion revealed specific cases of takedown 
requests. Some are related directly to incitement or terrorism, but others fall 
into a gray area for protected speech. For example, in 2019, a freedom of 
information request revealed that the Israeli police had developed a reporting 
mechanism for officers to file complaints about “police shaming” on social 
media that they found offensive. Those complaints were referred to the Cyber 
Unit to be taken down. During the pandemic, the Unit also granted a FOIA 
request that showed they had removed disinformation related to the COVID 
vaccine.Outside of these rare FOIA documents, data released by the State 
Attorney’s office offer a window onto the Cyber Unit’s shadowy activities. 
According to the Unit’s reports, over 95 percent of its takedown requests are 
related to security concerns, rather than hate speech, pornography, or other 
categories. For Adalah and other groups, invoking security can be a shield for 
censoring political dissent.“Security can easily give cover for political 
opposition because in the struggle for basic rights the lines aren’t always 
clear,” said Eghbariah of Adalah.As law professor Yuval Shany explained though, 
it’s difficult to know which groups are targeted under the broad label of 
security. There are Jewish extremist groups defined as terrorist organizations 
under Israeli law, and many far-right settlers have also reported widespread 
removals of their content by social media platforms. Vismonsky of the Cyber 
Unit did not respond to interview requests to clarify these practices.
“Security can easily give cover for political opposition because in the 
struggle for basic rights the lines aren’t always clear.”
In 2019, Adalah along with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel filed 
their legal challenge against the Cyber Unit claiming its “voluntary” referrals 
lacked any statutory basis and violated freedom of speech and due-process 
protections. The justices knocked down their petition in April, but with key 
caveats.The court actually rejected the state’s argument that the Unit’s 
referrals are purely voluntary and don’t constitute state action. The justices 
did however uphold the Unit’s alternative enforcement mechanism because Adalah 
couldn’t provide concrete examples of posts where the Unit had explicitly 
infringed on the rights of online users. In the absence of any violations, the 
court said the Unit’s practices fell under the general policing powers of the 
state. The general policing and residual powers in Israel give the government 
expansive authority to combat crime or terrorism as long as it doesn’t 
undermine human rights.The court’s ruling on the alternative enforcement sets a 
troubling legal precedent for Internet Referral Units in other countries like 
France and the U.K. These units have shown a similar aptitude for eroding civil 
liberties.The ruling also put Adalah in a catch-22. Eghbariah and his fellow 
attorneys couldn’t provide any examples of violations and thus lost the case 
because the Unit doesn’t make the contents of its takedown requests public. The 
court seemed to recognize this flaw in its decision. In a victory for freedom 
of information advocates, the court urged the Unit to start recording the 
content of their referrals for transparency purposes. The justices also 
recommended that the Israeli parliament pass legislation to set up oversight of 
the Unit’s practices.“We actually saw this as an important part of the decision 
because it recognized the transparency flaws we were pointing out,” said Yaffe, 
the Hebrew University professor, who represented the Freedom of Information 
Association in the case and submitted an amicus curiae brief.While the new 
transparency measures haven’t gone into effect yet, the Unit is taking the 
court’s recommendation seriously. In June, they assembled a roundtable 
discussion with privacy and freedom of information advocates to help develop 
more accountability.Greater transparency of the Unit could reveal new 
information about its takedown requests and lead to further legal action.“Once 
an organization identifies a specific victim of the Unit’s takedown requests 
through a leak or transparency reports, then it could open the case back up,” 
said Shany.Since his account suspension in May, Barakat banded together with 
other digital rights advocates and artificial-intelligence experts to start an 
awareness campaign, called End Digital Execution. Within three weeks of 
launching, their Facebook page accumulated over 150,000 followers. Their goal 
is to work with Facebook to try and address biases in their algorithm that 
target Arabic-speaking users.“I was never a particularly political person,” 
said Barakat, “but because of our situation we have to speak up and help others 
learn how to speak through social media.”

LUKE GOLDSTEIN
Luke Goldstein is a freelance writer who has written for the Washington Monthly 
and The Forward. 


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