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On 8 June 2016, the Facebook page God First Ministries shared a message claiming that posts containing the word Amen were being banned by the social media site: The comment section of the Facebook post displayed above quickly filled with messages (including many simply consisting of the word amen). On 17 June 2016, more than week after this message was posted to Facebook, it had accumulated close to 7,000 comments and had been shared more than 60,000 times. But curiously, Facebook had not deleted this message: In addition to the proliferation of amen posts on Facebook, several groups and pages containing the word Amen (such as Peruvian band Amen, the advertising agency Amen Communications, and the political group Trump Amen Time To Win) are still operating on the web site, showing that the word has not been flagged for removal, either. The Facebook post displayed here (like all type amen posts) is a version of the common like farming scams, in which a Facebook page shares a salacious, outrageous, and often inaccurate post for the sole purpose of gaining likes and shares. Typing amen — or anything else — below a post contributes to its popularity on the site and bypasses certain algorithmic controls Facebook has against scams in advertisings. This social popularity can later be leveraged for monetary gain. Facebook hasn't banned type amen posts. However, since Facebook is a private company and users of the site have to agree to its terms of service in order to sign up for an account, placing controls on its content would not constitute a violation of freedom of speech.
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