Chattanooga Times Free Press

Facebook promotes accurate info on vote-by-mail

- BY ERIC TUCKER

Facebook said Thursday that it is working to help Americans vote by mail, including by notifying users about how to request ballots and whether the date of their state’s election has changed.

The Vote By Mail notificati­on connects Facebook users to informatio­n about how to request a ballot. It is targeted to voters in states where no excuse is needed to vote by mail or where fears of the coronaviru­s are accepted as a universal excuse.

“In this constantly evolving environmen­t, we remain focused on working with election authoritie­s to provide people with authoritat­ive, geographic­ally targeted voting informatio­n,” Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebook’s head of security policy, told the House Intelligen­ce Committee at a hearing on election security and online disinforma­tion.

In working to facilitate voting by mail during the pandemic, the company is stepping into politicall­y sensitive ground. President Donald Trump and Republican­s are trying to limit such voting while Democrats are pushing it to boost turnout.

The hearing also featured officials from Twitter and Google and centered on efforts by the technology companies to police the spread of disinforma­tion, tied to both the election and COVID-19, on the platforms. Those are significan­t challenges in a country bracing for potentiall­y dramatic changes in how Americans vote, with expected widespread use of the vote-by-mail creating openings to cast doubt, skepticism and even false informatio­n on the November election’s results.

The hearing came as Big Tech faces increasing pressure to monitor content and to be transparen­t about the accuracy of informatio­n visible to users. Twitter has begun labeling tweets based on manipulate­d media that are attempted to confuse and mislead people, and has taken steps to prohibit paid political advertisin­g, including by government-controlled news media entities.

The Trump administra­tion, meanwhile, proposed this week rolling back legal protection­s for technology companies for material posted on their platforms.

Of particular concern heading into November are foreign influence operations, reliant on bogus social media accounts, aimed at swaying opinion. An investigat­ion by special counsel Robert Mueller revealed a vast Russian effort to sow discord on the internet during the 2016 presidenti­al election by playing up divisive social medias.

Facebook said that two days before the 2018 elections, it dismantled more than 100 accounts linked to the same operation. Between January and March of this year, the company says it dismantled roughly 1.7 billion accounts.

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