The world discussed these events during the prisoner exchange, while the sponsor of the massacre, META, faced new scandals.
While allowing pro-Israel content on Facebook and Instagram since the early days of the massacre, and even categorizing the sharing of the Palestinian flag as "terrorist propaganda," META has now censored Hamas.
META's scandalous censorship involved banning the footage recorded during the release of prisoners as part of the agreement by the Al-Qassam Brigades.
Facebook and Instagram deleted the shared videos. The decision drew criticism for categorizing moments where Hamas members carried an elderly prisoner to a Red Cross vehicle and a released mother and daughter waving goodbye as "terrorist propaganda."
The censorship, combined with Facebook approving a series of Israeli advertisements calling for violence against Palestinians and issuing an assassination call against a pro-Palestinian activist, reignited accusations that META is sponsoring the massacre.
The agreement between Israel and Hamas for a four-day "humanitarian pause" in the conflict came into effect on Friday, November 24, at 07:00 (GMT+2).