Arab Times

‘Big Tech cashing in from evil’

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LOS ANGELES, Jan 19, (AP): Hours after an angry mob of Trump supporters took control of the US Capitol in a violent insurrecti­on, Selena Gomez laid much of the blame at the feet of Big Tech.

“Today is the result of allowing people with hate in their hearts to use platforms that should be used to bring people together and allow people to build community,” tweeted the singer/ actor. “Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Google, Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg, Jack Dorsey, Sundar Pichai, Susan Wojcicki - you have all failed the American people today, and I hope you’re going to fix things moving forward.”

It’s just the latest effort by the 28-year-old Gomez to draw attention to the danger of internet companies critics say have profited from misinforma­tion and hate on their platforms. Gomez has been calling out Big Tech for months - publicly on the very platforms she’s fighting and privately in conversati­ons with Silicon Valley’s big hitters.

In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press on Jan. 6, just hours before the Capitol riot, Gomez said she’s been frustrated by what she views as the companies’ lackluster response. She said they have to “stop doing the bare minimum.”

Selling

“It isn’t about me versus you, one political party versus another. This is about truth versus lies and Facebook, Instagram and big tech companies have to stop allowing lies to just flow and pretend to be the truth,” Gomez said in a phone interview from New York. “Facebook continues to allow dangerous lies about vaccines and COVID and the US election, and neoNazi groups are selling racist products via Instagram.

“Enough is enough,” she said. Facebook and Twitter representa­tives declined to comment. Google didn’t respond to an AP request for comment.

Gomez is among a growing number of celebritie­s using their platforms to call out social media, including Sacha Baron Cohen, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence, Kerry Washington, and Kim Kardashian West.

Gomez became passionate about the issue in 2017 when a 12-year-old commented on one of her Instagram posts: “Go kill yourself.”

“That was my tipping point,” she said. “I couldn’t handle what I was seeing.”

Social media experts have argued that companies like Facebook and Twitter played a direct role in the

Capitol insurrecti­on both by allowing plans for the uprising to be made on their platforms and through algorithms that allow dangerous conspiracy theories to take flight. That’s even though executives, such as Facebook’s Sandberg, have insisted that planning for the riots largely took place on other, smaller platforms.

“The operationa­l planning was happening in spaces that Selena, for example, was identifyin­g to Sheryl Sandberg in advance saying, ‘You know, we need to do something about white supremacis­t extremism online and their ability to just form a group on Facebook and happily talk away to each other, plan what they’re going to do next,’” said Imran Ahmed, CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, which has helped educate Gomez about online misinforma­tion.

Search

In emails shared exclusivel­y with the AP, Gomez told Sandberg in September that “a search for a militia group ‘Three Percenters’ results in dozens of pages, groups and videos focused on people hoping and preparing for civil war, and there are dozens of groups titled ‘white lives matter’ that are full of hate and lies that might lead to people being hurt or, even worse, killed.”

That’s even though Facebook banned US-based militia groups from its service in August.

In the same email, Gomez also points to several ads with lies about election fraud being allowed to remain on Facebook and Instagram and questions why that was being allowed.

“I can’t believe you can’t check ads before you take money, and if you can’t you shouldn’t be profiting from it,” she wrote. “You’re not just doing nothing. You’re cashing in from evil.”

In an email response to Gomez, Sandberg defends Facebook’s efforts to remove harmful content, saying the platform has removed millions of posts for hate speech, and bans ads that are divisive, inflammato­ry, or discourage people from voting. She didn’t directly address the advertisin­g examples Gomez pointed to.

“It’s beating around the bush and saying what people want to hear,” Gomez said about her interactio­ns with Sandberg and Google, among others. “I think at this point we’ve all learned that words don’t match up unless the action is going to happen.”

Following the violence at the US Capitol, tech companies made some of their biggest changes to date.

Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and other platforms banned President Donald Trump, drawing criticism from some including the American Civil Liberties Union that it was censorship, and praise from others who say the president abused his platform by encouragin­g violence.

In a thread defending Twitter’s Trump ban, CEO Jack Dorsey said “offline harm as a result of online speech is demonstrab­ly real, and what drives our policy and enforcemen­t above all.”

In addition to banning Trump, Facebook has been removing video and photos from Capitol rioters. The company also added text on posts questionin­g the election, confirming that Joe Biden has been lawfully elected, and saying it was taking enforcemen­t action against militarize­d social movements like QAnon.

While the changes are positive, they’re “just a drop in the bucket,” said Jeff Orlowski, director of Netflix’s “The Social Dilemma,” a popular 2020 film that showed how Silicon Valley’s pursuit of profit could pose an existentia­l threat to US democracy.

Voices like Gomez’s can be a huge help to get the message across, considerin­g her hundreds of millions of followers, Orlowski said.

“Think of the advertisin­g revenue from every Selena Gomez post. Think of the advertisin­g revenue from every Donald Trump post, the advertisin­g revenue from every post from The Rock or whoever,” he said. “Those people are literally generating millions of dollars for these companies ... The top 20 people on Instagram have probably the most influence over Mark and Sheryl compared to anybody else until finally Congress as a whole gets enough momentum and energy to put some legislatio­n together.”

Also:

NEW YORK: Sen Josh Hawley has found a new publisher after his book was dropped by Simon & Schuster in the wake of the siege of the US Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump.

The conversati­ve publisher Regnery announced Monday that Hawley’s “The Tyranny of Big Tech” will come out this spring.

“Regnery is proud to stand in the breach with him. And the warning in his book about censorship obviously couldn’t be more urgent,” Regnery President and Publisher Thomas Spence said in a statement.

Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, has been widely condemned for his encouragem­ent of the Jan. 6 protest that ended with a violent mob rampaging through the Capitol. Thousands had gathered that day as Congress voted to formally certify Joe Biden’s win over Trump. Hawley and Sen.

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