Local domestic-violence group says Meta temporarily blocked gala posts
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Summary
The Retreat reported repeated rejections of posts promoting its June 6 gala on Meta platforms for alleged violations of social-issue rules; executive director Kate Carbonaro said the decisions hampered outreach to survivors and were reversed after a lengthy review.
The Retreat, a local domestic-violence support organization, told East End News that Meta platforms repeatedly rejected posts promoting its June 6 gala "All Against Abuse," citing alleged violations of standards related to social issues or politics.
Kate Carbonaro, executive director of The Retreat, is quoted in the broadcast saying that when a platform labels the word "abuse" too political, it makes it harder for survivors to find support. "When a platform decides the word abuse is too political to say out loud, they're telling survivors that their experience is too controversial to talk about,” Carbonaro said in the statement read on air. "We can't reach people if we can't name what happened to them. Survivors don't have the luxury of sanitizing their reality. Meta shouldn't either."
The segment presented the incident as part of a wider trend toward "algo-speak," where organizations alter words or images to avoid content-moderation filters. The broadcast said Meta eventually approved the posts after what The Retreat described as a long and frustrating review process. The show provided the gala website (allagainstabuse.org) for more information but did not include a direct comment from Meta during the episode.
The Retreat’s organizers framed the episode as an example of how automated moderation decisions can affect nonprofit outreach and fundraising for survivor services.

