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Mark Zuckerberg Was Just Blasted Over Facebook’s ‘Censorship’ of an Iconic Photo

An open letter in Norway’s largest newspaper by circulation accuses the Facebook founder of abusing power and threatening freedom of speech.

Mark Zuckerberg attendes Mobile World Congress 2015

This article originally appeared on Time.com.

“Dear Mark Zuckerberg,” read the headline on the cover of Aftenposten, Norway’s largest newspaper by circulation.

It was an open letter from Espen Egil Hansen, the paper’s editor-in-chief and CEO, accusing the Facebook founder and CEO of abusing power and threatening the freedom of speech.

It follows an uproar over Facebook’s decision to delete the iconic photo of a crying young girl running from napalm bombs during the Vietnam War, taken by Nick Ut. The photo was a part of a Norwegian author’s Facebook post about significant historical photos documenting the history of military conflicts.

See also: Sorry Mark Zuckerberg, But Facebook Is Definitely a Media Company

“I am upset, disappointed — well, in fact even afraid — of what you are about to do to a mainstay of our democratic society,” wrote Hansen, calling Zuckerbergthe world’s most powerful editor.

The “right and duty” of the media to bring important information to readers, even if it may be unpleasant, “should not be undermined by algorithms encoded in [Facebook’s] office in California,” the Norwegian journalist continued.

He further said that, in allowing its algorithms to censor the photo “just because a tiny minority might possibly be offended by images of naked children,” Facebook is only trying to achieve its objective of making the world more open and connected “in a totally superficial sense.”

Read the full letter here.

[Aftenposten]