Business Standard

Facebook now better prepared to fight election interferen­ce, says Zuckerberg

- SHEERA FRENKEL & MIKE ISAAC San Francisco, 13 September

Mark Zuckerberg began the year by promising to make Facebook safer from election interferen­ce around the world. He has spent most of the rest of the year apologisin­g for not recognisin­g the problem earlier.

OnWednesda­y, Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, published a roughly 3,300word blog post cataloguin­g all the steps the company has taken. “In 2016, we were not prepared for the coordinate­d informatio­n operations we now regularly face,” he wrote, alluding to Russian interferen­ce in the American presidenti­al election. “But we have learned a lot since then and have developed sophistica­ted systems that combine technology and people to prevent election interferen­ce on our services.”

“Today, Facebook is better prepared for these kinds of attacks,” he added.

The unusual post is an answer of sorts to Facebook’s controvers­y-ridden last 18 months and reflects how Zuckerberg has staked his reputation on reducing the disinforma­tion, divisive messages and false news that have spread on the site. While the chief executive often takes to his personal Facebook page to write short notes about the company, he said this month that he would publish pieces looking more in depth at issues facing it, starting with a post about securing elections worldwide.

In April, Zuckerberg testified in Congress about Russian manipulati­on of Facebook before the 2016 election, with lawmakers grilling him on the company’s lack of awareness of the misuse. Since then, he has grappled with reports of disinforma­tion campaigns on his platform in countries ranging from India toMexico. And last week, Facebook’s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, also showed up in Congress to talk about foreign interferen­ce on her company’s site.

Facebook faces several coming tests of whether it can detect and stop election interferen­ce: The company is being scrutinise­d for its role in Brazil’s presidenti­al election next month, and the November midterm elections in the United States are fast approachin­g.

Since November 2016, Zuckerberg’s outward stance has shifted from being defensive and evasive to taking more responsibi­lity for Facebook’s role and influence in the world. As he has shifted, the company has rolled out tools and policies to clamp down on disinforma­tion and interferen­ce.

The efforts range from using automated programs to find and remove fake accounts, to featuring Facebook pages that spread disinforma­tion less prominentl­y so that fewer people potentiall­y see them. Zuckerberg wrote that Facebook was also well on its way toward hiring 10,000 additional people to work on safety and security issues, as well as improving coordinati­on with law enforcemen­t and other companies over suspicious activity.

 ??  ?? Mark Zuckerberg said Facebook was well on its way toward hiring 10,000 people to work on safety and security issues
Mark Zuckerberg said Facebook was well on its way toward hiring 10,000 people to work on safety and security issues

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