The Daily Telegraph

Clegg had hand in blocking Biden story

Social media giant accused of ‘acting as PR team’ for president’s rival after its handling of press claims

- By Nick Allen in Washington

Sir Nick Clegg was involved in the decision to reduce the social media distributi­on of a New York Post story which was based on the alleged emails of Joe Biden’s son. Senior Republican­s said the move was censorship, accusing Facebook, for whom Sir Nick is vice-president of global affairs and communicat­ions, of “acting as Joe Biden’s PR team”. Decisions on contentiou­s subjects such as Donald Trump’s online posts are taken at the highest level of the company.

FACEBOOK’S Sir Nick Clegg was involved in the controvers­ial decision to reduce the social media distributi­on of a New York Post story which was based on the alleged emails of Joe Biden’s son.

The decision, which has caused uproar with less than three weeks to the US election, was lambasted as politicall­y motivated censorship by senior Republican­s, who accused Facebook of “acting as Joe Biden’s PR team”.

Facebook’s move was announced on Wednesday by Andy Stone, its policy communicat­ions director.

It is understood that the vast majority of decisions on content moderation at Facebook are made automatica­lly by artificial intelligen­ce or comparativ­ely low-paid contract workers.

However, a small number of cases, which are considered culturally, socially, or politicall­y sensitive, are escalated through a chain of executives.

They go through the vice-president of content policy, and the vice-president of global public policy, and then to Sir Nick, the vice-president of global affairs and communicat­ions.

A tiny number of the most difficult cases then reach Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook chief executive, and Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer.

Decisions about Donald Trump’s posts, including the president’s claims that the coronaviru­s was less deadly than the flu, are taken at the highest level of the company, including by Sir Nick, Mr Zuckerberg and Ms Sandberg.

It is not known who would have taken the ultimate decision in either of the recent cases.

The Daily Telegraph understand­s that even decisions about posts by Mr Trump no longer always require Mr Zuckerberg’s sign-off, because the company has now had enough experience at moderating the president. A spokesman for Facebook declined to say what part Sir Nick played in the decision.

The row over Facebook’s role came after The New York Post published details from Hunter Biden’s purported emails, including his business dealings in Ukraine and China, along with personal photograph­s that included one showing Hunter asleep with a crack pipe.

The newspaper received the informatio­n from Rudy Giuliani, Mr Trump’s personal lawyer. It said the informatio­n originated from Hunter Biden’s laptops which had been left at a computer repair shop in Delaware. The most controvers­ial email is allegedly from Vadym Pozharskyi, an adviser to the board of Ukrainian energy company Burisma, thanking Hunter “for inviting me to DC and giving an opportunit­y to meet your father”.

Joe Biden has denied any involvemen­t in his son’s business dealings, and his Democratic campaign team said no such meeting ever took place.

The story was also blocked by Twitter, which said it violated rules against posting private informatio­n.

Twitter suspended the official account of the Trump campaign for sharing the article, and the account of Kayleigh Mcenany, the president’s press secretary, who accused the social media giant of “essentiall­y having me at gunpoint”.

Mr Trump said: “It’s going to all end up in a big lawsuit and there are things that can happen that are very severe that I’d rather not see happen, but it’s probably going to have to.”

The president suggested repealing section 230, a law that protects social media companies from being sued over content posted on their platforms.

Announcing the action on The Post article, Mr Stone said: “This story is eligible to be fact checked by Facebook’s third-party fact checking partners. In the meantime, we are reducing its distributi­on on our platform.”

Jack Dorsey, chief executive of Twitter, said his company’s handling of the situation had been “unacceptab­le”.

He said: “Our communicat­ion around our actions on The New York Post article was not great.”

Josh Hawley, a Republican senator, said he wanted Facebook and Twitter to answer questions in Congress over the controvers­y.

He said: “It’s basically Big Tech versus democracy. These tech companies want to control what we read. They want to control journalist­s in this country. They want to control the news and we just can’t let them.”

‘It’s going to all end up in a big lawsuit and there are things that can happen that are very severe’

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 ??  ?? New York Post photo, that appears to show Hunter Biden asleep with a crack pipe, purportedl­y from his laptop
New York Post photo, that appears to show Hunter Biden asleep with a crack pipe, purportedl­y from his laptop

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