Beautiful Virgin Islands

Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025

German court ordered Facebook to remain BigTech, not Big Brother

The top German Court has forced Mark Zuckerberg to relax the communist mind-set he get at home, by reminding him that Germany is not the USA, but is instead a real democracy. In a landmark ruling, the German Federal Court of Justice has prohibited Facebook from suspending user accounts without prior notice. In addition, when suspending accounts the social network must first state the reason and provide the opportunity to appeal.

Germany has forced Facebook to respect the democracy that the USA has clearly lost.

The German Federal Court ruled that the social network giant can't delete posts without at least informing users, and must give users advance notice when it moves to suspend their accounts.

The Karlsruhe-based Court said that while Facebook had the right to decide what stays on or is taken off the platform, it needs to be more forthcoming with users on how it does so. The court found that the social media company did not inform two users that it had removed their posts. It added that the company should have also informed and given users an opportunity to respond before suspending them from its platform.

“Provisions in general terms and conditions are ineffective if they unreasonably disadvantage the contractual partner of the user contrary to the requirements of good faith,” said the court. 

Facebook will not be allowed to delete the posts again after they are reinstated.

This is not USA. Germany is a democracy!
The federal court of justice considered two cases dating back to August 2018 in which Facebook deleted comments taking aim at Muslim migrants and people of immigrant origin and suspended the users' accounts. It ordered the company to restore the posts.

The court found that Facebook wasn't entitled to delete the posts and suspend the accounts under its April 2018 conditions of use, which barred users from violating "community standards" and banned "hate speech," which it did not define more precisely. It said that "users of the network are inappropriately disadvantaged, contrary to the requirement of good faith."

Facebook is entitled in principle to set standards that go above and beyond legal requirements and to reserve the right to delete posts and suspend accounts, the court said. But it must commit itself to informing a user at least after the event about the removal of a post, and to giving advance notice of plans to suspend an account, giving the user a reason for the suspension and the possibility to respond.

The case in question is from 2018, when Facebook removed posts in which two German users attacked migrants because it said the posts violated its policy on hate speech, and then suspended the users’ accounts for several days. The users complained that the posts' removal was a violation of free speech.

The court said while Facebook was entitled to set strict content rules banning hateful speech and to block users, the way it implemented its content moderation policy was not proper.

“Individuals are finding a voice against platforms here with the help of a court, this is a really important decision because it shows how individuals can exercise their rights and that nobody is above the law,” Matthias Kettemann, a lead researcher on platform law at the Leibniz Institute for Media Research.

The court's judgement highlighted a general trend toward empowering individuals using powerful social media platforms like Facebook, which now effectively operate as town squares.

European lawmakers are currently working on a bill to force tech companies to better moderate their platforms. The bill, called the Digital Services Act, would also force social media platforms to be more transparent about how they police their platforms and allow users to challenge companies’ decisions on their posts.

“Users should understand why platforms make decisions and have options to appeal them and see their content reinstated in case that platforms make mistakes,” said Christoph Schmon, international policy director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group.

But the German court decision went further than the Digital Services Act's proposals, ordering Facebook to inform users and ask for their response before banning them from the platform, which experts say will signal to lawmakers in Brussels to amend the Digital Services Act in kind.

“The judgement will certainly have some impact on future amendments and ideas that some (political) groups will try to push forward within the Digital Services Act,” said Eliška Pírková, Europe policy analyst at digital rights association Access Now.

Still, she cautioned against overestimating the impact of the case on the EU bill.

“We are seeing members of the European Parliament being influenced rather by the national regulations or legislative proposals, within their own member states, than by the decisions of courts,” she said.

Julian Jaursch, a platform governance researcher at the Stiftung Neue Verantwortung think tank in Berlin, believes the case dented social media companies' power.

“The court case is an acknowledgement that rules for content moderation have so far been, in most cases, unilaterally decided and set by the tech platforms, and now it’s very clear that there are limits.”


Mark Zuckerberg, brainwashed by his home education camp, does not even understand why censorship is right for China but wrong elsewhere.


“We welcome the ruling of the Court, which upholds the principle that platforms like ours are allowed to remove hate speech according to company policies and block the respective user accounts,” said a Facebook spokesperson. This statement was obviously in denial of the facts, as if the verdict had not ordered Facebook to stop their totalitarian and anti-democratic policy to deplatform legitimate users just because their legitimate opinions did not support Facebook's political and commercial agenda.

Censorship is inevitable in China as it’s a necessary evil to support China's massive success. Likewise, democracy is a necessary evil in the USA and Europe to support what has made them successful so far. 

However, it's apparent that this is something which Mr Zuckerberg’s home education camp forgot to make clear, so the German Court is trying to fix it. 

Facebook has failed to realize that not everyone who thinks otherwise, or even the opposite, is an enemy or a hater.

Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg seem to have forgotten that once the censorship dam was breached, it would end in another Holocaust.

Because the real danger to the United States is not a bunch of hooligans who went way too far in their freedom of protest on Capitol Hill, but the delegitimization, demonization and deplatforming, a-la-1939 style, against the eighty million citizens who dared not to endorse the ruling party.

As Mr. Bach once said: 

China is so successful thanks to the sophisticated capitalist/communist regime it has developed. The West was so successful thanks to the opposite system of government it adopted - more or less - from ancient Greece.

The adoption of Chinese rule of law, seemingly the objective of Mr Zuckerberg and his cohorts, greatly jeopardizes the success of the West.  By the same token, it would be a great mistake for China to abandon its economic prosperity and social security in favor of too-rapid an adoption of the liberal practices of the West, before the Chinese economy and society have matured and are ready for fewer controls. 

China, impressively, is trying to maintain a delicate balance between communism and capitalism. On the other hand the West has lost its balance and looks to be falling off its perch. lt has relinquished its hard-won democratic values ​​in favor of ruthless thought-control and destructive political "correctness", driven and enforced by the tyranny of the new media oligarchy.  The West is quickly falling back to the days of McCarthyism and earlier, nastier Inquisitions. Who knows what comes next: Crusaders, Colonialism ..... cannibalism? 

The current behavior and ruthless self-belief of the radical left that dominates today's big tech is reminiscent of the radical left and the fanatical democracy that brought Hitler to power.

Anyone who does not like Trump is happy that this new-age censorship has silenced eighty million noisy and bothersome Americans. I'm not sure they'll be as happy when the wheel turns and the other side uses this terrifying new "legitimacy" to do the same to them.

The United States seems not to understand this. It's good that Germany has not forgotten it.






Newsletter

Related Articles

Beautiful Virgin Islands
0:00
0:00
Close
US Treasury Secretary Calls for Institutional Review of Federal Reserve Amid AI‑Driven Growth Expectations
UK Government Considers Dropping Demand for Apple Encryption Backdoor
Severe Flooding in South Korea Claims Lives Amid Ongoing Rescue Operations
Japanese Man Discovers Family Connection Through DNA Testing After Decades of Separation
Russia Signals Openness to Ukraine Peace Talks Amid Escalating Drone Warfare
Switzerland Implements Ban on Mammography Screening
Japanese Prime Minister Vows to Stay After Coalition Loses Upper House Majority
Pogacar Extends Dominance with Stage Fifteen Triumph at Tour de France
CEO Resigns Amid Controversy Over Relationship with HR Executive
Man Dies After Being Pulled Into MRI Machine Due to Metal Chain in New York Clinic
NVIDIA Achieves $4 Trillion Valuation Amid AI Demand
US Revokes Visas of Brazilian Corrupted Judges Amid Fake Bolsonaro Investigation
U.S. Congress Approves Rescissions Act Cutting Federal Funding for NPR and PBS
North Korea Restricts Foreign Tourist Access to New Seaside Resort
Brazil's Supreme Court Imposes Radical Restrictions on Former President Bolsonaro
Centrist Criticism of von der Leyen Resurfaces as she Survives EU Confidence Vote
Judge Criticizes DOJ Over Secrecy in Dropping Charges Against Gang Leader
Apple Closes $16.5 Billion Tax Dispute With Ireland
Von der Leyen Faces Setback Over €2 Trillion EU Budget Proposal
UK and Germany Collaborate on Global Military Equipment Sales
Trump Plans Over 10% Tariffs on African and Caribbean Nations
Flying Taxi CEO Reclaims Billionaire Status After Stock Surge
Epstein Files Deepen Republican Party Divide
Zuckerberg Faces $8 Billion Privacy Lawsuit From Meta Shareholders
FIFA Pressured to Rethink World Cup Calendar Due to Climate Change
SpaceX Nears $400 Billion Valuation With New Share Sale
Microsoft, US Lab to Use AI for Faster Nuclear Plant Licensing
Trump Walks Back Talk of Firing Fed Chair Jerome Powell
Zelensky Reshuffles Cabinet to Win Support at Home and in Washington
"Can You Hit Moscow?" Trump Asked Zelensky To Make Putin "Feel The Pain"
Irish Tech Worker Detained 100 days by US Authorities for Overstaying Visa
Dimon Warns on Fed Independence as Trump Administration Eyes Powell’s Succession
Church of England Removes 1991 Sexuality Guidelines from Clergy Selection
Superman Franchise Achieves Success with Latest Release
Hungary's Viktor Orban Rejects Agreements on Illegal Migration
Jeff Bezos Considers Purchasing Condé Nast as a Wedding Gift
Ghislaine Maxwell Says She’s Ready to Testify Before Congress on Epstein’s Criminal Empire
Bal des Pompiers: A Celebration of Community and Firefighter Culture in France
FBI Chief Kash Patel Denies Resignation Speculations Amid Epstein List Controversy
Air India Pilot’s Mental Health Records Under Scrutiny
Google Secures Windsurf AI Coding Team in $2.4 Billion Licence Deal
Jamie Dimon Warns Europe Is Losing Global Competitiveness and Flags Market Complacency
South African Police Minister Suspended Amid Organised Crime Allegations
Nvidia CEO Claims Chinese Military Reluctance to Use US AI Technology
Hong Kong Advances Digital Asset Strategy to Address Economic Challenges
Australia Rules Out Pre‑commitment of Troops, Reinforces Defence Posture Amid US‑China Tensions
Martha Wells Says Humanity Still Far from True Artificial Intelligence
Nvidia Becomes World’s First Four‑Trillion‑Dollar Company Amid AI Boom
U.S. Resumes Deportations to Third Countries After Supreme Court Ruling
Excavation Begins at Site of Mass Grave for Children at Former Irish Institution
×