I wonder if this has anything to do with that Facebook ...umm scandal? (Not sure what to call it) that happened a few years ago where that marketing firm (forget the name) basically made up all sorts of shit that wasn't true and posted it to social media to influence voters during the presidential campaign. Facebook got in a lot of shit for allowing untruthful information and blatant lies to be spread on their forum. Since FB has essentially become a news source for the public, policy makers strongly advised FB to start fact checking the content that was posted to the site and to remove statements that weren't true that could influence the public. I thought this was only for paid content though. Basically the philosophy behind it is that you don't want a wealthy political group or other country to be able to influence another country's elections by running untruthful campaigns. There is a documentary on the whole thing on Netflix. Watched it last year but of course I forget the name of it lol.
Anyway, facebook got in a lot of shit over that whole event so I wonder if this new policy is related to that?
It sucks that your stuff was removed or flagged though. Thats frustrating.
The documentary was "The Great Hack" and the marketing firm was "Cambridge Analytica"
I wonder if it relates to those events?