National Post

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Facebook woes politician­s’ fault

- TERENCE CORCORAN

It’s hard to feel much sympathy for Mark Zuckerberg as the regulatory world gears up for his historic appearance Tuesday and Wednesday in Washington before members of the bloviating inquisitor­s at different Congressio­nal committees.

As we all know, Facebook, the internet giant Zuckerberg created, has been painted as the villain in what is now headlined around the world as “the Facebook data scandal.”

Once the tech giant CEO gets through his opening remarks, the politician­s will engage in their usual ritual grandstand­ing takedown of their star witness, posing aggressive questions and making sure they extract a sufficient quantity of grovelling and admissions of wrongdoing. Then they will move on to their core objective: more regulation.

Unfortunat­ely, Zuckerberg seems all too willing to take the fall for the Facebook data scandal. “We didn’t take a broad enough view of our responsibi­lity,” he says in his prepared notes for his Congressio­nal appearance, “and that was a big mistake. It was my mistake, and I’m sorry. I started Facebook, I run it, and I’m responsibl­e for what happens here.”

Well, let’s to cut to the chase: No, Facebook is not responsibl­e for what happened in the Facebook scandal.

Does nobody see the supreme irony in all this — in Zuckerberg being hauled before politician­s to answer for the fact that politician­s and their operatives around the world are at the heart of the Facebook data breaches and voter manipulati­on? We all seem ready to sit back and allow lawmakers to take a bigger role in controllin­g the Internet — so as to protect us from lawmakers and other power seekers who are apparently ready to abuse the Internet.

In his many media appearance­s and now before Congress, Zuckerberg comes across as a squishy and naïve liberal blinded by his own simplemind­ed belief in “community” and “bringing people together” and “social justice” and all the other good things he believes, perhaps rightly, Facebook fosters around the world.

Another less liberal CEO than Zuckerberg, one less willing to grovel before the politician­s and the media, could justly turn the tables on his accusers. Facebook is not among the internatio­nal community of data raiders, algorithm creators, fakenews generators, voter manipulato­rs, privacy-breachers and opinion-warpers who emerged from the shadows in recent weeks via the Cambridge Analytica affair.

Facebook, after all, has not been guilty of breaching the privacy of 87 million users for political gain. That guilt belongs to the politician­s and/ or their various backroom organizati­ons whose inner workings were apparently exposed and certainly sensationa­lized by Christophe­r Wylie, the 28-year-old Canadian who last month testified before a British House of Commons committee.

Wylie, who also fed key media companies his story, does not come across as the most credible of witnesses. But he has turned the world against Facebook, mostly by claiming to have evidence of purloined data and nefarious activities by the various political hacks he says he once worked for.

Described by a New York Times columnist as “a pinkhaired, nose-ringed oracle sent from the future to explain data,” Wylie claimed he has evidence of his former employers’ malfeasanc­e in various political campaigns, in facilitati­ng Russian interferen­ce in U.S. elections, in Trump’s victory and the Brexit vote and maybe even politics in Canada.

As Wylie tells it, his former employer, Cambridge Analytica, bought and used improperly circulated Facebook data to manipulate voters. Analytica denies most of Wylie’s allegation­s, and much of what he has claimed seems like self-aggrandizi­ng speculatio­n. Even his wording is suspicious­ly non-categorica­l and leaves lots of wiggle room. On the use of data and funding by the Leave side in the British Brexit referendum, Wylie hedges: “I think it is completely reasonable to say that there could have been a different outcome in the referendum had there not been, in my view, cheating.”

At this point, though, it is irrelevant whether Wylie is a truth saying oracle or an unhinged young man parading his delusions of power and influence before the media and government committees. The world has listened and now the real victim of the scandal, Facebook, is being paraded in public for punishment.

Facebook is also a proxy for Silicon Valley. A weekend Financial Times report outlines the objective, which is to use privacy issues to bring Facebook and other Internet operations under greater government and regulatory control. According to European activist Max Schrems, says the Times, “we risk shifting power over our lives from laws made by elected officials to a self-appointed Silicon Valley cabal.”

Right now it looks like the opposite is afoot, with lawmakers taking power over Silicon Valley. And squishy liberal Zuckerberg is ready to go along with more political regulation by the politician­s who pose most of the risks of data abuse.

In a media conference call last week, Zuckerberg said he was ready to accept Europe’s new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), said to be the most comprehens­ive data privacy laws in the world, with corporate fines in the billions of dollars against companies who breach regulation­s. “I think regulation­s like the GDPR are very positive,” said Zuckerberg.

Facebook, in other words, will submit to politician­s whose electoral back offices are responsibl­e for creating the Facebook data scandal.

 ?? AFP / PRU ?? Canadian data analytics expert Christophe­r Wylie appears as a witness before the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee of members of the British parliament in London in March
AFP / PRU Canadian data analytics expert Christophe­r Wylie appears as a witness before the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee of members of the British parliament in London in March
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