Facebook Wants To Block Illegal Gun Sales
Nerval's Lobster writes "Most of the time, Facebook allows its users to hawk goods or solicit donations on Pages or Timeline postings, comparing such activity to placing a physical note on a bulletin board at a supermarket. Now it plans on regulating users who rely on this method to sell what it calls 'regulated' items, which includes firearms. 'Any time we receive a report on Facebook about a post promoting the private sale of a commonly regulated item, we will send a message to that person reminding him or her to comply with relevant laws and regulations. We will also limit access to that post to people over the age of 18,' Facebook announced as part of the new rules. The social network will also prevent users from posting any sort of items 'that indicate a willingness to evade or help others evade the law,' which means no offers to sell firearms across state lines or without a background check. Presumably, Facebook will have filters in place that allow it to scan for such content. Facebook is a private network, of course, and not (despite its ubiquity) a public utility — meaning it can do whatever it wants with regard to Terms of Use. But that likely won't stop some people from complaining about what they perceive as the company overstepping its boundaries."
It's expressly legal for private inviduals to sell to other private individuals (without crossing state lines) without a background check; indeed it's *illegal* for said private individuals to perform such a background check, at least on the federal level.
Now you may have some sort of state/local law that requires checks between inviduals, but sheesh.
-- I ain't broke, but I'm badly bent.
Now Facebook can be sued for failing to prevent the sale!
Lawyers everywhere, rejoice!
So if I were to try to promote the use of encryption in private communications, would that be "a willingness to evade or help others evade the law?"
Nothing to hide, and all that...
Hmm, the humour and sarcasm seem to have been be lost on you.
I can sell assault weapons for cash all day long in my state to private people without even getting their name. and "GASP" most of my "DANGEROUS ASSULT WEAPONS" are unregistered as well..
Oh the horror....
That said, the last place I would sell them is to twits on Facebook. Cripes even ebay twits are not worth dealing with. There are plenty of great private gun selling sites that have people that understand the values and have clues...
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
FB is lying, yet again. They are currently deleting ALL firearms for sale/buy posts.
So, Facebook will start harassing people who sell guns... and people will just go somewhere else to buy and sell guns.
Hell, I wouldn't be surprised if a number of sites cropped up for just that purpose - the legal transfer of a firearm from one private citizen to another.
You can't stop the signal.
An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
Since Facebook does not verify addresses and has no way of knowing where the sale is actually being transacted, this is just total nonsense.
Facebook should just post an alert that reads "It is against Federal law to sell a firearm to a prohibited person. This includes felons, those dishonorably discharged, etc."
Like Gunbroker.com?
Been here for a while.
Fackebook prohibits all weapons sales. They always have. I don't see why illegal weapons sales are a big deal here, given that "illegal" is a subset of "all".
This is not news, because it's not new.
They are a private company and can (or should be) allowed to impose whatever rules they want... Its only the federal government that is required to adhere to the bill of rights. So until the Constitution gets amended, we can argue about how illegal background checks, waiting periods, and registration by the federal government are - but there is absolutely nothing you can say about FB doing whatever they feel is right.
Peter.
Now Why would anyone sell arms on facebook? . aint it supposed to be clandestine business? .. it's like selling arms on times square ..
FORTUNE: When he's not too busy connecting people across the universe, Mark Zuckerberg is pursuing a new "personal challenge," as he calls it. "The only meat I'm eating is from animals I've killed myself," says the Facebook founder and CEO...Zuckerberg's new goal came to light, not surprisingly, on Facebook. On May 4, Zuckerberg posted a note to the 847 friends on his private page: "I just killed a pig and a goat."
[Inside a pet store that's being used as a front for the mob]
Mobster: I would like a "bunny".
Sales Mobster: What kind of "bunny"? A semi-automatic "bunny" [making a gesture like he's holding rifle] or a hand held "bunny" [making a gesture like he's holding pistol]?
Mobster: Whichever "bunny" you think is better for shooting a guy in the head.
You can always buy or steal an illegal gun from a local gun control advocate. Handguns, assault weapons, you name it, they've got it. For example, Barbara Ann Lipscomb helped organize the first Million Mom March. She was arrested after she used an illegal gun to shoot a construction worker named Kikko Smith. (She was mad at another guy with a similar-sounding name.) Police confiscated four illegal guns from her home, including a TEC-9 assault weapon. Lipscomb, who also uses the names Barbara Graham and Barbara Martin, was convicted of breaking 6 different laws, including three different gun control laws. Nobody needs Facebook to obtain guns illegally as long as there are gun control advocates around. Support local businesses!
FTFY
The eBay of guns
This amounts to the sort of censorship that online forums and chatrooms/services have been attempting to do for a long time now. Problem is wordfilters don't work, there's always a way around them, and faster than they can add terms to the wordfilter, someone comes up with another euphemism or substitute for the word or phrase being blocked. Same thing will happen here, they'll just come up with different words to say "gun for sale", and Failbook will never be able to keep up with the evolution of the language being used. In other news: Failbook is now planning on censoring what you post. Haven't you people had enough of Failbook and it's bullshit yet?
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
"With grey hairs starting to show, Facebook now offers users a way to brandish their shotguns and chaise those damn under-eighteens off their lawn, I mean wall"
A private individual can sell a firearm across state lines, he just has to ship it to a federally licensed dealer (FFL) who then performs the NICS check before transfer.
With his creation of a fake conservative group to try to trick conservative voters into supporting unlimited immigration and H1B visas, and now stunts like this, Zuck is going so deep into the tank for the DNC that he's going to lose lots of products (who think of themselves as "users") to the "next big thing" in social networks when it comes along. This was something that was likely to happen anyway given the number of Facebook "users" who are young (and therefore, as young people always are, into fads) but the effect will likeley be worse if he needlessly antagonizes half of the political spectrum. This is what NBC and CNN did. CEOs who play politics do so at their shareholders' peril. Oh, and the reason I say people think of themselves as users and I call them products is simple: Facebook's product is "user" information, and "user" eyeball time... THAT is what they sell. Their customers are the people who buy the product. The product is the idiot who, thinking he's getting something for "free", freely hoists himself onto Zuck's store shelf and allows Zuck to sell his time and privacy. If you are not the person paying, you are NOT the customer.
The problem is that once he starts down this path of using his service to suppress things one political party wants suppressed, he has no good excuse not to follow-up with suppression of other things they want suppressed. Once Facebook shows that it is capable of suppressing all instances of something it CHOOSES to suppress, it will have lost any ability to go into a court and claim it is incapable of suppressing any thing the government wants to suppress...
Without regard to your views on guns, and private gun sales, this should be troubling; This has much wider implications for lots of non-gun issues and for everybody else who tries to innovate on the web (any future congressional panel will be able to grill any future CEO with questions like "why can't you block {insert thing here}? Facebook can block it! We will shut you down if you do not add blocking capability..."). It also should trouble you if you hold Facebook stock as anything more than a short-term investment.
If you read the summary (no, I didn't touch TFA), you'll notice that it's all about regulated items (instead of just firearms). Which makes sense, really. Imagine facebook allowing people to post about selling and buying drugs (legal to consume by prescription or just plain illegal). Or any other regulated item, really.
This discussion isn't and shouldn't be about firearms. It needs to be about regulated items. Most comments fell for the obvious controversial headline and thus shaped their perception of the issue.
Facebook does not want to be hounded by the anti-gun/do-it-for-the-children/omfg-i'm-scared lobby.
What are they going to do, delete Eric Holder's account?
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
5.56 golf club!
FB won't allow me to create an ad for my page, but they always want to know why I haven't created an ad yet.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Martin-B-Retting-Inc/107290006008401
Ebay solved their Gun problems by combining the Guns and Pornography categories.
The AC you replied to replies...
I think you got a bit of a weird axe to grind their buddy, I admit I phrased it poorly.
I said federally *LEGAL* not... federally *ILLEGAL*.
Because...things that don't break the law... are...lawful unless or until they break another law. Now, your interpretation of the second amendment is subject to all types of jurisprudence going back centuries... I actually won't argue it as it doesn't matter.
I was for the record replying to the parent, not saying how facebook should have said it. Because it *IS NOT* "expressly legal for..." That is a statement of legality -- whose veracity unfortunately varies between jurisdictions all over the country.
But federally speaking -- I was accurate. It's legal.
You...might want to check that liberal hatred. I'm the real liberal... the type that believes in all ten sections of the bill of rights.
This does not represent any sort of change in facebook's rules. They merely made a statement to appease the angry mob. . . . . and the mob thinks they've won some battle. win-win.
I damn well don't think the government should be interfering with the people's right to own guns. I also don't think we should require drivers licenses, have license plates, social security numbers, or similar. If somebody is breaking the law (going 120 in a 40mph zone and weaving in and out of lines) the state aught to collect evidence of the infraction, make an arrest, and haul them down to the station. If the person is identified (ie place of current residence) and/or pays a significantly high bail amount you can still let them go. What eliminating drivers licenses and license plates will do is ensure the state is limiting to pursuit of those posing a serious danger. Going 70 in a 65 when everybody else is doing 75 or driving in the left lane illegally should not warrant an officers attention. Currently though police have lots of opportunity to abuse citizens and there is no real recourse. Judges are part of the same system and tend to side with the police officers. We aught to have a coalition that monitors police and remove those who violate our rights or use excess force (ie not actual force, but the law) on people doing little to nothing wrong. As it stands I've only once gotten pulled over for something that maybe warranted a yelling at (going a bit too fast). Yet- I've been pulled over many many many times. If you think I'm doing something wrong I'm not. I'm just young, drive a red sport-like car (I rarely go over the speed limit more than 5-10 mph, which is clearly more reserved than most drivers, etc), and practice my rights (don't provide anything more than required by the law, ie name and address, if walking, license, registration, and insurance if driving).
"It would also remove posts from any state in which a gun seller says a background check will be skipped, even if such checks arenâ(TM)t required where the seller lives." There is no law requiring such a check in most states, therefore they are knowingly deleting posts which conform to the law. What's more, it is essentially impossible for a private citizen to perform a proper NICS check, meaning that it is impossible to honestly comply with the intent of the policy. Also, it requires a near expert in law and firearms to determine which guns are actually legal or illegal, so there is little chance of this being implemented as intended. Finally there is little evidence of a positive causal relation between background checks and actual impacts. While we can certainly accept that sometimes it may offer a minor deterrent or slowing, in most of the incidents which have led to this type of policy implementation it would have absolutely no effect, thereby negating the need for such policy in the first place. This is a TERRIBLE situation.
Well, at least in Florida, I (an individual firearms owner) can sell to another individual in person.
I was told by the operator of a gun store, that I *can* choose to ask FDLE to run a background check for the purpose of selling a firearm. They will only give a yes/no answer to if the buyer is ok to sell to.
I, as a private individual, *can* sell to anyone, in any state. It has to be shipped to a federally licensed firearms dealer who is willing to do the transfer (i.e., pretty much any gun store). Around here, the cost to do the transfer is about $25, paid by the buyer. For the sake of not having the weapon seized in transit, it has been recommended to me, to ask a local store to handle the outbound shipment. The receiving dealer is responsible for ensuring local laws are followed. For example, if you live in California, and I sell you an AR-15, but not in a California-legal configuration, they are obliged not to give it to you. Likewise, if you don't meet the legal requirements to own a firearm, they will refuse it. I haven't personally been involved in such a transaction, but it is my understanding that if the transaction cannot be completed (the weapon is not legal in that jurisdiction, or the owner cannot take possession of it), it will be returned to me.
If you sell me a firearm, I, as a CCW holder, can pick up the weapon at the receiving store immediately, but they still call FDLE to ensure there's nothing new on my record. If I didn't have a valid CCW, there may be a waiting period, depending on the type of weapon.
There are some things that are illegal in Florida, but not everywhere. I happened to stumble across a few while looking at alternative ammunition. The "dragon's breath" shotgun shells are illegal here. I just thought they were interesting, although I don't see them being very practical. Flechette shotgun shells are also illegal. In theory, I could go buy them in another state. I may also be able to mail order them. If I am caught possessing or using them, I may be in trouble.
Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
I worry every time I have to go through a background check. It's not that I've done anything, or I intend to do anything. There's always a chance for human error.
I had an interaction with the police once. They got rather irate that I had a felony warrant. At least the officer asked for them to look at it carefully. It was my name, but my DOB was about 30 years off. That was years ago, and hasn't come up again, so I'm guessing the warrant was satisfied.
We're all just one clerical error away from failing a background check. About the time you're going through the background check, isn't the best time to try to get it fixed. Well, unless you're flying, then we're all one soundex match away from someone with a name or alias that sounds similar ours to get put on the no-fly list. Good luck getting off of that.
Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
You might want to check your percentages:
1) deaths by gunfire in US in 2013: > 12000
2) gun owners: roughly 20% of US population, i.e. roughly 60 Million people
Therefore the fraction of irresponsible gun owners in 2013 is around 12 000 / 60 Mill = 0.02%. This is an order of magnitude more than you claimed. The number is certainly not negligibly small as you seemed to try to suggest.
The number is going to shrink a little if one factors in events were several people were killed, but then 12000 is a lower bound to begin with. Taking into account the duration of gun ownership (it doesn't matter whether the killing happens in the first or the twentieth year of ownership) and non-lethal encounters (also irresponsible), we're almost certain to gain another order of magnitude.
sorry, hate those homophony-induced spelling mistakes :)
...and not censorship? They are not an entity which either writes or enforces laws.
I'm not a gun nut by the way, and I believe nobody should be allowed to have a gun (and yes, I know criminals do not obey laws, but it's equally obvious that the fewer guns there are in society, the harder it would be for any person to acquire a gun). But this is a separate issue.
The point of my postis that the service you people want to use to pass messages through censors your messages, but the article isn't tagged as such.
(Oh, and another thing... I have no account on here, and I see no need for it, but every post I have ever written has been completely removed (not just below threshold) within a few minutes. Is this how it's supposed to work? I don't write trollish posts, and I find it hard to believe (compared to the "N-word spewing I see from AC at -1) that every single one of my posts has been downmodded so low it's actually removed.)
It's time to dump government surveillance tools such as facebook and google etc. It should be obvious by now what these entities are all about. Boycott Facebook, Google and any others that do more than advertised (i.e. snooping into business that is none of theirs) after they have you snared.
They are moving to block all gun sales including perfectly legal sales.
> Mark Zuckerberg: The only meat I'm eating is from animals I've killed myself ... I just killed a pig and a goat.
I wonder what YHWH thinks about a Zuckerberg eating a pig? Maybe brimstone will fall from the sky onto his head for such outrage. Shofar horn blowing angels will announce that event and people will stand in awe worldwide seeing the majesty of the Almighty?
As for the goat, Sunday readings suggests Zuckerberg should offer and sacrifice that one to YHWH, rather than eating it himself!
I'm calling the nra because it's my rights under the 2nd amendment to sell firearms (within state laws) and none of their fakebooking business.
Predictable the gun nuts are going ballistic over this, but it is an entirely reasonable thing for FB to do on their 'property'.
Imagine the result if these people tried to sell their guns in a shopping centre or restaurant the authorities would be on them in no time flat.
From the summary alone it's clear Facebook isn't "blocking" anything. They are asking people to remember to follow the law while on their property. They want to be sure that what takes place on their site is encouraged by them to be within the law. This makes Facebook potentially less culpable if someone violates the law in a post, as they've made it clear they want the laws followed.
I am not a lawyer. Ask a lawyer if you want legal advice.
So FB is not a public utility - I guess that was easy - it is not utility because it has no utility, public or otherwise.
Dammit, I've been getting the wrong newsfeeds! I never knew I could buy guns via Facebook posts... wait, maybe I have the wrong kinds of friends or something...
'But that likely won't stop some people from complaining about what they perceive as the company overstepping its boundaries'
It's even less likely that this will be effective in any way, shape, or form.
Put all the anti gunners in one state, in less than a year they'll be slaughtered like the sheep that they are.
There is no legal requirement to run a background check for interstate sales of long guns. Period. Interstate sales of handguns must go through an FFL dealer. There is no legal requirement to perform a background check or go through a dealer for INTRAstate sales from person to person. That's the law. If Facebook doesn't like that, who the f*ck are they to make their own laws that supersede federal laws? Imagine how ugly things would get if someone decided that a photo ID was required to vote. Oh, wait, that did happen and the feds stomped all over it. Bottom line is that if someone wants to get a gun without going through legal methods, they are going to find a way. Criminals don't care how many laws they break.
Beyond this issue, this is an illustration of Facebook thinking it's important.
You can go find that person to sell firearms to.
The Second Amendment doesn't demand that Facebook (or, indeed, anyone else) help you sell your firearms.
If FB decide not to let you sell via them, then they don't have to: sell it yourself.
That's my favorite definition now.
need a gun. Bunch of pansies posing as tough guys. Wah wah wah! I want my gun.