Vancouver Sun

Facebook’s Zuckerberg grilled in U.S. Congress on digital currency, privacy and elections

- PETE SCHROEDER

WASHINGTON Facebook Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg conceded on Wednesday that the company’s planned digital currency Libra was a “risky project,” but sought to reassure skeptical U.S. lawmakers that it could lower the cost of electronic payments and open up the global financial system to more people.

Zuckerberg also fended off aggressive questions on election interferen­ce, free speech, hate groups and fake news from members of the U.S. House of Representa­tives Financial Services Committee.

Rep. Maxine Waters, the panel’s Democratic chair, quizzed Zuckerberg on Facebook’s steps to combat misinforma­tion and voter suppressio­n ahead of the November 2020 U.S. presidenti­al election. She also suggested policy-makers should consider breaking up Facebook.

Waters had previously called for halting the Libra project before its planned 2020 launch, and has drafted legislatio­n that would bar tech companies from entering financial services.

“It would be beneficial for all if Facebook concentrat­es on addressing its many existing deficienci­es and failures before proceeding any further on the Libra project,” Waters told Zuckerberg two days after Facebook disclosed it had removed a network of Russian accounts targeting U.S. voters on its Instagram platform.

Lawmakers blasted Facebook for failing to crack down on online child exploitati­on and political misinforma­tion, and for data privacy lapses. Several said they did not trust Facebook to help provide financial services to its 2.4 billion users given the past scandals.

Zuckerberg said Facebook would insist on U.S. regulatory approval before launching Libra, which is being establishe­d by a Switzerlan­d-based consortium.

Libra has faltered in recent weeks amid sustained criticism from lawmakers and regulators globally over fears it may aid money laundering and upend the global financial system. Several financial partners including Mastercard, Visa, PayPal and eBay have abandoned the project.

Rep. Ann Wagner, a Republican, pressed Zuckerberg on why so many companies abandoned the Libra effort.

The 35-year-old Facebook CEO conceded that those companies dropped out because Libra is a “risky project” and that he was not sure it would even work. During his testimony, the price of Bitcoin versus the U.S. dollar tumbled to a five-month low.

Calm and composed, Zuckerberg navigated the hostile room without major slip-ups.

The CEO last appeared before Congress in April 2018 when he fielded questions over two days on political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica’s misuse of Facebook customer data to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

On Wednesday, he acknowledg­ed Facebook’s mistakes, saying he understood the social media giant was not the “ideal messenger” for the Libra project and that the company has “work to do to build trust.” But he said past missteps should not stand in the way of Libra, based in Switzerlan­d.

“The vision here is to make it so that people can send money to each other as easily and cheaply as it is sending a text message.”

Zuckerberg was unable though to make material commitment­s on behalf of Libra because Facebook no longer controls the project.

On Oct. 14, the Libra Associatio­n comprising 21 members agreed articles of associatio­n laying out how the organizati­on will be governed, as required by Swiss law. Most decisions will require a majority vote of the group’s governing council, meaning Facebook will not call the shots.

Some Republican­s did offer support for Zuckerberg and the Libra project, arguing the government should not stop the private sector from innovating. “I have my own qualms about Facebook and Libra and the shortcomin­gs of Big Tech,” said Rep. Patrick McHenry, the top Republican on the panel. “But if history has taught us anything, it’s better to be on the side of American innovation.”

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has admitted to lawmakers on Wednesday that his company’s proposed digital currency Libra is a “risky project” and that he was not sure it would work.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has admitted to lawmakers on Wednesday that his company’s proposed digital currency Libra is a “risky project” and that he was not sure it would work.

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