"In a democracy, I believe that people should be able to see for themselves what politicians that they may or may not vote down are saying," he answered. Any actions Facebook might take "depends on the context" in which a dishonest piece of content is posted, he added.
It is not (and never has been) the newspaper's job to validate the info.
Nor is it FB's job to validate whatever people post.
If anyone takes info on the Internet ANYWHERE at face value, without knowing (and trusting) the source, they get what they deserve.
Expecting a CEO to know everything about a platform as complex as Facebook is foolish and not possible. There are things he hopes happens, things he knows happens and things he doesn't know about at all.
If you don't want to use Facebook, then don't.
Here's the clip with Rep. Pressley, which I'll note it's a bit different than how it was characterized in the article here on Ars:
https://youtu.be/D6-WaakMxjk
Summary of one portion of Ms. Pressley's questioning regarding Calibra Wallet:
Ayanna P: "Is it free to use the Calibra Wallet?"
Mark Z: "It's not a service that is available today, but assuming we can launch it, the plan is that it will be free."
AP: "No fee?"
MZ: "Congresswoman, that's the goal."
AP: "So there is no fee?"
MZ: "Congresswoman..."
AP: "Moving on. Since you are going to charge a fee, how does this help anyone?"
So they're bitching at him for a service that is not even available yet, but is presently planned to be free, and saying the problems for low-income folks in the whole country being "under-banked" is because it's too expensive and that's apparently his fault. Even the free services they're proposing are apparently too expensive for her liking. Zuckerberg's response here is not flustered. It's more like he's baffled that she could be so incredibly stupid and he's struggling to speak down at a level she can comprehend. He said free and no fees multiple times and she wouldn't listen, kept speaking over him, and then still got it wrong at the end and deliberately misrepresenting what he said.
Why does the article only cite Democrat House representatives?
I watched an hour of this. Is this how these hearings normally go? A lot of attacking, trying to get that “hah, gotcha” moments, ranting about completely unrelated topics, sound bytes, etc. and not much trying to actually solve things.
It seemed like a complete waste of everyone involved’s time.
Pretty sure Zuck's use of the word "vote" in this context is referring to the ballot box, not a Facebook post."In a democracy, I believe that people should be able to see for themselves what politicians that they may or may not vote down are saying," he answered. Any actions Facebook might take "depends on the context" in which a dishonest piece of content is posted, he added.
interesting. i don't think there's a way to downvote a facebook post. you can trash a sponsored post directly, but if someone shares it, then you can remove it from your feed, and maybe you can comment within their feed, but you can't "vote down" anything.
You seem to be under the impression that Facebook recognizes the same problems that the rest of society does. Their actions, policies, and testimony say otherwise.But, given that the genie is out of the bottle, I'm afraid that the best solution to the problems that Facebook is causing is... Facebook. They're the subject matter experts here. They likely understand the problems better than anybody else--and certainly better than anybody in Congress.
Genuine question: What's the current standard on fact checking for other types of advertisement? Do Newspaper fact check classified ads people post? Do Google and Yahoo fact check ads posted on their advertising network? Does Gmail fact check mass emails that people send?
I'm waiting for someone in his position to just stop, look at them, and say,
" I can buy and sell you fucks like baseball cards. I'm telling you what's going to happen...not asking. Now, you can keep my name out of your fucking mouth, or we can play the game of whose-election-fund-gets-swamped-next."
Not that I have any love for Zuck, or any of the ultra-wealthy, but I have much less affection for our current roster of politicians.
Yea, thats a super good idea to do to people in congress.
I feel that Facebook has become so easy to hate, that they could do literally anything and it would be perceived as bad.
Pretty sure Zuck's use of the word "vote" in this context is referring to the ballot box, not a Facebook post."In a democracy, I believe that people should be able to see for themselves what politicians that they may or may not vote down are saying," he answered. Any actions Facebook might take "depends on the context" in which a dishonest piece of content is posted, he added.
interesting. i don't think there's a way to downvote a facebook post. you can trash a sponsored post directly, but if someone shares it, then you can remove it from your feed, and maybe you can comment within their feed, but you can't "vote down" anything.
In other words, he's saying "let the world see politicians lie to them, discover they're lying to them, get mad at those politicians for lying to them, and punish that politician by voting against them in the next election."
It's a nice little naive world view, and in a vacuum/not the real world we live in might be a nice ideal, but I think we've clearly seen, mainly with Trump (but there's plenty of other examples,) that a lot of potential voters will believe anything their favorite politician tells them, will do zero fact-checking, and when they discover they've been lied to will deny they ever lied, or rationalize some reason why the lie was OK.
Personally, I completely disagree with his contention: I think it's news organizations' jobs to report exactly what politicians say, even or especially if it's a lie.
Political ads, though, need to be held to a higher standard. They need to be clear on their funding and who paid for and approved of it, and if they're flat-out falsehoods they need to be rejected.
I also think any political funding that can't be tracked and audited to determine exactly who funded it, i.e. super PACS and other dark money sources, should be outright banned, but that would likely require a new Constitutional amendment, so that likely won't happen anytime soon. But transparency goes a long way to mitigating most of the worst abuses.
It's not like "don't outright lie" is a high standard - political ads on TV still can distort the truth pretty effectively, as long as they stop just short of flat-out lying.
If I'm frank here I'd wish that this level of pressure wasn't reserved for companies in the tech sector like Facebook only. This level of all out grilling is sorely needed for shitshows like the US Telecom industry, big pharma and the very politicians on both sides that enable the mess we currently have.
Off the top of my head here are the people who are more than due for this level of grilling:
Donal Trump and his enablers
Ajit Pai
AT&T's CEO
Verizon's CEO
The Sackler's (for their hand in the opioid crisis.)
FOX's CEO
I'm all for grinding up Zuck with this barrage of condemnations, but honestly, I'm starting to see a problem with all this circus.
It seems this is getting a lot of attention and reaching the overall mainstream consensus, but the one thing I am not seeing is putting all other tech giants under the same ammount of scrutiny, as if Facebook was the only one doing these things.
At some point it becomes just another witch hunt. The government, and the public by proxy, cannot afford to focus all their attention on a single company when a whole lot of those practices are spread all throughout Silicon Valley.
The shady deals with advertising networks and political campaigns? Look up Twitter and Google to see if they are not doing similar stuff.
Prejudice and lack of representation? Same.
Bad work practices, steamrolling fair job markets, and swerving away from legislation? Practically all businesses that see themselves in the sharing economy.
Not that this will really result in anything, but if it at the very least serves the purpose of bringing more awareness to what's happening with these tech giants and how they are making money, focusing on Facebook alone simply isn't enough. It's an easy target, but just a piece of the entire puzzle.
I think the most important thing we need to legally define in the next ten years is...
Does social media count as "news" or "not news" and if its the former... Where do libel/slander laws apply?
(And how much responsibility social media platforms must bear as opposed to the author of the content)
If anyone thought Facebook was guilty of libel they would have already been charged, this is not a libel or slander issue. Facebook is a platform provider and as such is not responsible for content posted within it. The issue is that when that doctrine was brought into existence nothing like Facebook had ever existed, it was never meant to apply to a global platform that is being used by billions of people often as their primary source of information.
Two comments:
The wheels of justice grind slowly but exceedingly fine.
and
It takes a long time to turn around a aircraft carrier. But eventually you're turned in the right direction and you have an aircraft carrier.
Unfortunately, if you have enough money, you can change the routing of the input feed for the wheels of justice and you can bribe the nav officers and add incorrect waypoints to the nav systems of the CVN.
See, I know it's a meme at this point but Mark Zuckerberg does not act like any human I've ever watched or interacted with in my life.
I understand he's a nerd and I am one myself, but this guy is not human.
See, I know it's a meme at this point but Mark Zuckerberg does not act like any human I've ever watched or interacted with in my life.
I understand he's a nerd and I am one myself, but this guy is not human.
It's always a bit disturbing to see how far left many on this site are. I am no fan of Zuckerberg but he answered these questions very well. The congressmen seem to just want attention.
I've decided that there should be two requirements on political advertising on Facebook.
A) All Facebook political ads should be designated as political ads when they are purchased, and clearly identified when displayed, displaying only with a bright red, white and blue border.
B) There should be NO TARGETING for Facebook political ads. The buyer has only two choices - ALL VOTERS or ALL VOTERS who are eligible to vote for that particular candidate or political race (the correct district or state for that race). No targeting by age group, gender, income, race, political affiliation, profession, whatever. They go to ALL VOTERS (and only voters, no minors), and since you pay for eyeballs, they should be very damned expensive.
This is literally every congressional hearing on any subject with even a modest media profile. It’s beyond dumb.I watched an hour of this. Is this how these hearings normally go? A lot of attacking, trying to get that “hah, gotcha” moments, ranting about completely unrelated topics, sound bytes, etc. and not much trying to actually solve things.
It seemed like a complete waste of everyone involved’s time.