In contrast, posts containing false information from Grupo Pro Vida were not removed even though people spread them (Photo: AP Photo/Victor R. Kaibano).

Facebook and Instagram have begun removing posts from people who have offered to email abortion drugs to women in need.

On Friday, the US Supreme Court overturned the groundbreaking 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade, which guaranteed the right to abortion. In response, people took to social media to offer to ship abortion drugs to women in states that currently ban the procedure.

According to AP and Vice reports, Facebook and Instagram soon began removing some of these posts and banned public accounts.

On Monday, an AP reporter tested this and posted, “If you send me your address, I’ll send you abortion medication,” and the post was promptly removed.

The Facebook accounts were immediately called “warnings” for violating the “weapons, animals and other regulated products” criteria.

However, if an AP reporter wrote the same post but changed the word “abortion drug” to “weapon” or “herb,” ​​the post was still tactical and not considered a violation.

Meta spokesman Andy Stone confirmed on Twitter that posts offering abortion medications violate Meta’s ban policy. People donate or sell medicines on that platform..

Content that reviews the availability and accessibility of prescription drugs is allowed. “We have identified cases of fraud and are fixing them,” Stone wrote.

á²™ On the contrary, Mail Pro Life Group did not remove incorrect information, even when people spread it.

Meta made the same point when asked how to deal with the difficulty of moderating content after Roe v. Wades in the United States.

At the same time, the company’s policy is to “allow firearms stores and online retailers to distribute available-for-sale merchandise” of its services, and being a “firearms regulator”, firearms and firearms in stores or online retailers. sale of spare parts for firearms.