Facebook stands accused of cowing to censorship from China, after a video of a Tibetan monk's self-immolation was deleted from the website over Christmas.
The footage, showing 37-year-old monk Kalshang Yeshi setting himself on fire in front of a police station in Sichuan province, was posted online by prominent Tibetan critic, writer and journalist Tsering Woeser.
Ms Woeser was told after its deletion that the video "didn't meet Facebook's community standards."
She told the New York Times that she "couldn't believe [her] eyes" when she read the deletion notice.
"How is it that this has become like a Chinese website?" she asked.
Facebook later issued a statement citing the "graphic" nature of the video, saying that, "to give people additional control over the content they see," they would be introducing a warning system.
"We do not currently have these tools available and as a result we have removed this content," the statement concluded.
Speculation continued about the social media website's motives, however, with the censorship coming shortly after an enthusiastic visit to Beijing by a Chinese-speaking Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's CEO.
Mr Zuckerberg was also photographed recently laughing in his California offices alongside China's internet tsar Lu Wei, and with a copy of Xi Jinping's 515-page Governance of China book prominent on his desk.
Activist Hu Jia tweeted at the time that Facebook was "risking repeating the mistakes of Yahoo" by being overfriendly to Chinese demands.
Facebook is currently blocked in China but Mr Lu has hinted that a deal could still be struck.
"I didn't say Facebook could not enter China, but nor did I say that it could," Mr Lu told a press conference in October. "We could not allow any companies to enter China's market and make money while hurting the country."
Information from Tibet is strictly controlled by the Chinese government, prompting one Tibet scholar to note "there are more foreign journalists right now in North Korea than there are in Tibet".
Human rights activists say that strict control comes at the price of Tibetan freedom and culture, meaning self-immolation has become one of the few ways to make protest against Chinese rule heard outside the Himalayan region.
Meanwhile, China’s censors showed no signs of slowing down over the festive season, deleting information about the Sony hacking controversy, out of sensitivity to its ally North Korea, and severely restricting access to Gmail by blocking third-party e-mail applications such as Outlook and Apple Mail.
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