Private individuals will no longer be allowed to advertise
guns on Facebook and Instagram, the photo-sharing
service owned by Facebook.
Facebook had already banned the sale of guns without ID
checks, but the new rules aim to stop all gun trade
between individuals on the sites.
Businesses can still advertise guns on Facebook and
Instagram.
The move comes three weeks after US President Barack
Obama unveiled new restrictions on gun purchases.
Mr Obama's executive actions included background checks
for all gun sellers and the need for states to provide
information on people disqualified from buying guns due to
mental illness or domestic violence.
The rule change brings gun sales under the same
restrictions placed on illegal drugs and pharmaceuticals by
Facebook, that has 1.59bn users worldwide.
Facebook "was unfortunately and unwittingly serving as an
online platform for dangerous people to get guns," Shannon
Watts, of the Everytown for Gun Safety campaign group,
told Associated Press.
The group said it had found evidence that, in two cases,
guns had been bought on the site and used to kill others.
Everytown for Gun Safety was one of a number of groups
that had called on Facebook to change its policy.
The National Rifle Association (NRA), which opposes
changes to gun legislation, has not yet responded to
Facebook's decision.
In 2014, the NRA said previous moves by the network to
limit gun advertising were insignificant.
In late 2013, New York's attorney general, Eric T
Schneiderman, wrote to Facebook, alerting them to "a
number of groups in which users promoted the sale of
assault rifles, handguns, rifles, shotguns and gun parts."
Several hours after Facebook's announcement on Friday,
dozens of groups on the site advertising private gun sales
remained live.
Some users writing on the groups' walls suggested starting
new groups under inconspicuous names to avoid detection.
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Saturday, 30 January 2016
Facebook bans private gun adverts
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