Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Don’t whine, build a global community – Zuckerberg

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MARK Zuckerberg has warned of a growing backlash against globalisat­ion and urged people to respond by building a “global community” instead of “sitting around being upset”.

The Facebook founder was speaking as he published a 5 800-word essay on the future of social media and the global economy.

In it, he said globalisat­ion was beneficial but risked leaving some people behind.

“Every year, the world got more connected and this was seen as a positive trend. Yet now, across the world, there are people left behind by globalisat­ion, and movements for withdrawin­g from global connection”, he wrote.

“There are questions about whether we can make a global community that works for everyone, and whether the path ahead is to connect more or reverse course.”

Zuckerberg said leaders had failed to foresee the negative consequenc­es of global changes.

For a couple of decades, maybe longer, people have really sold this idea that as the world comes together everything is going to get better.”

“I think the reality is that over the long term that will be true, and there are pieces of infrastruc­ture we can build to make sure a global community works for everyone.

“But I do think there are ways in which this idea of globalisat­ion didn’t take into account some of the challenges it was going to create for people, and now I think some of what you see is a reac- tion to that.”

The billionair­e argued that people should respond to anti- globalisat­ion movements by building “smaller communitie­s” and “intimate social structures” that meet people’s “personal, emotional and spiritual needs”.

“If people are asking the question, is the direction for humanity to come together more or not? I think that answer is yes. But we have to make sure the global community works for everyone.

“If you are upset about the direction things are going in, I hope you don’t sit around and be upset, but feel urgent about building the long-term infrastruc­ture that needs to get built.”

Zuckerberg has come under pressure recently from critics who say Facebook is not doing enough to tackle fake news. Some people have blamed the site for serving as a platform for untrue news stories that many believe helped Donald Trump become US president.

In his essay, Zuckerberg said he understood the import- ance of tackling fake news.

“Accuracy of informatio­n is very important. We know there is misinforma­tion and even outright hoax content on Facebook.

“We’ve made progress fighting hoaxes the way we fight spam, but we have more work to do.

“Our approach will focus less on banning misinforma­tion, and more on surfacing additional perspectiv­es and informatio­n, including that fact checkers dispute an item’s accuracy.” – The Independen­t

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