Calgary Herald

Facebook CEO to do damage control in testimony before U.S. Congress

- JAMES MCLEOD

TORONTO Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg will tell the U.S. Congress this week that the social media giant is already testing a transparen­cy tool in Canada, as part of a wider suite of policies aimed at preventing nefarious election meddling.

Zuckerberg was on Capitol Hill on Monday meeting with politician­s ahead of testimony at two Senate committees Tuesday, and more testimony to a House of Representa­tives committee Wednesday. The congressio­nal testimony is the climax of a weeks-long damage control effort on the part of Facebook ever since news broke in late March indicating that a British company called Cambridge Analytica used improperly harvested data from millions of Facebook users to try and sway the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election in favour of Donald Trump.

The House Committee on Energy and Commerce has already posted a seven-page advance copy of Zuckerberg’s opening statement, which contains a laundry list of measures the company says it is taking to combat future abuse of the platform, including hiring thousands more people to work on security and content review.

“I’ve directed our teams to invest so much in security — on top of the other investment­s we’re making — that it will significan­tly impact our profitabil­ity going forward. But I want to be clear about what our priority is: protecting our community is more important than maximizing our profits,” Zuckerberg ’s statement to Congress reads.

Facebook now says 126 million people may have seen content from the Russian Internet Research Agency, along with roughly 20 million people who saw Russian disinforma­tion on Instagram.

Zuckerberg said that from now on, political and issue advertisin­g will have to be bought by somebody with a confirmed identity and location.

And then there’s the “View Ads” function, which is only available to Canadians for now but will be expanded to the rest of the world this summer, ahead of the U.S. midterm elections. “For even greater political ads transparen­cy, we have also built a tool that lets anyone see all of the ads a page is running. We’re testing this in Canada now and we’ll launch it globally this summer,” Zuckerberg says in the advance copy of his remarks. “We’re also creating a searchable archive of past political ads.”

One of the concerns raised is that noxious political ads can be targeted to specific demographi­c groups on Facebook, so nobody will see them except the audience most susceptibl­e to the message. By allowing people to dig through all the ads a single entity posts on the platform, Facebook is hoping to prevent that sort of thing.

In an email, Elections Canada said that it met with Facebook about the new tool in December, “specifical­ly recommendi­ng that it adds an archive function, so ads that are no longer running can still be viewed.”

Facebook now says that such an archive feature will start in the U.S. this summer and roll out to the rest of the world later.

It said it was going to be notifying people on Monday if their data was swept up in the breach. Also on Monday, it announced plans to set up a program where scholars will have access to Facebook data “to help provide independen­t, credible research about the role of social media in elections, as well as democracy more generally.”

 ??  ?? Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg

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