Archaeologists Defied ISIS. Then They Took on Facebook.
In june 2019, athar released a 90-page report titled “Facebook’s Black Market in Antiquities: Trafficking, Terrorism, and War Crimes.” In it, Al-Azm and Paul propose that Facebook prohibit the promotion of illicit cultural property in its community standards, and, rather than delete content that violates those terms, share it with experts and law-enforcement officials, who can use it as criminal evidence as they prosecute the actors involved and return confiscated artifacts to their origins.
Source: Archaeologists Defied ISIS. Then They Took on Facebook. – The Atlantic