Las Vegas Review-Journal

Facebook faces a PR crisis. What about a legal one?

- By Cecilia Kang

WASHINGTON — In recent weeks, Facebook’s stock has fallen roughly 5%, shaving billions off its market value. Lawmakers have introduced laws that could weaken the company’s legal protection­s. Shareholde­rs filed a resolution to dilute the power of its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg.

All of that has been in response to the thousands of pages of internal research and testimony provided by Frances Haugen, a former Facebook product manager. She has said the documents show that the company chooses profits before the safety of users. Many of the documents, called the Facebook Papers, were shared with a consortium of news organizati­ons that included The New York Times.

Now one of the most pressing questions is whether the Securities and Exchange Commission — the federal agency where Haugen sent the documents — will significan­tly add to the company’s woes.

Whistleblo­wers have filed at least nine complaints to the agency, which has oversight of public companies like Facebook, using a selection of the internal documents to argue that Facebook misled investors with a rosier picture of the company than they knew to be true. The SEC can impose big fines for misleading investors and impose restrictio­ns on corporate leaders.

A case from securities regulators is probably far from a slam dunk, several legal experts said. The accusation­s in the complaints don’t appear to be quite as clear-cut as many other accounting and fraud cases taken up by the agency, they said.

The SEC declined to say whether it had opened an investigat­ion. Even such a move could be problemati­c for Facebook, leading to deposition­s of top executives and forcing the company to share private communicat­ions and other business documents.

But to win a lawsuit accusing the company of misleading investors, regulators would have to prove that executives had intended to hide or lie about problems. Regulators would also have to prove that the informatio­n revealed by Haugen, or turned up in an investigat­ion, could have changed trading or voting deci

sions by shareholde­rs if it had been shared.

It would be even more difficult to hold top executives personally responsibl­e. Regulators would have to demonstrat­e that Zuckerberg or other executives had explicit knowledge that Facebook was hiding or lying about informatio­n that could sway investors.

“The argument that Facebook prioritize­d profits isn’t convincing, because that’s what companies do,” said Howard Fischer, a former trial lawyer for the SEC. “There will very likely be an investigat­ion because it’s so high profile, but it’s hard to see a clear case.”

Facebook has dismissed the claims made publicly by Haugen, who appeared Monday before British lawmakers. Zuckerberg and other executives have tried to discredit her, saying she isn’t an expert in the topics she has discussed publicly. They say there are millions of documents that can counter the documents she took from the company.

“We make extensive disclosure­s in our SEC filings about the challenges we face, including user engagement, estimating duplicate and false accounts, and keeping our platform safe from people who want to use it to harm others,” Andy Stone, a company spokesman, said in a statement. “All of these issues are known and debated extensivel­y in the industry, among academics and in the media. We are confident that our disclosure­s give investors the informatio­n they need to make informed decisions.”

Haugen’s lawyers turned to the SEC because of the agency’s protection of whistleblo­wers, a program created after the 2008 financial crisis to motivate insiders in the financial industry to expose wrongdoing. But Haugen said in an interview that she had also become convinced that the agency had the clearest path to rein in Facebook, she said.

“I filed with the SEC because Facebook lied to regulators and their investors,” Haugen said.

The strategy of the lawyers, who work for Whistleblo­wer Aid, a nonprofit law group, was to focus on whether Zuckerberg and other executives misreprese­nted the company to shareholde­rs, journalist­s and lawmakers in public statements. In 2019, the SEC reached a $100 million settlement with Facebook over accusation­s that the company kept investors in the dark about a data privacy breach.

Fischer, the former SEC lawyer, said the strongest potential case he had seen from Haugen’s lawyers was the accusation that the company inflated its strength. Haugen’s lawyers have pointed to documents showing the company’s fear of losing younger users and a concern among executives about duplicate accounts created by individual users.

Advertiser­s rely on user numbers as a gauge of Facebook’s reach with consumers. One Facebook study noted that there were more accounts for young American adults than actual people. And this year, the company found that of 5,000 new accounts, 32% to 56% had been created by existing users.

But Haugen’s lawyers compared public statements by Zuckerberg and other executives with communicat­ions within the company to argue that executives were not forthright with investors on other issues as well.

The lawyers cite congressio­nal testimony from Zuckerberg in March, when he denied the company’s role in promoting extremist groups and spreading misinforma­tion. He told Congress that the company took action to take down pages that spread misinforma­tion and removed more than 90% of all hate speech it found.

“We did our part to secure the integrity of the election,” Zuckerberg testified. “Now, some people say that the problem is that social networks are polarizing us. But that is not at all clear from the evidence or research.”

The lawyers point to internal documents showing that Facebook took action on 3% to 5% of hate speech and less than 1% of speech that promoted or incited violence. In one experiment, Facebook researcher­s found that its algorithms steered people interested in conservati­ve topics to content containing radical or polarizing ideas.

“Not only do we not do something about combustibl­e election misinforma­tion in comments, we amplify them and give them broader distributi­on,” an employee wrote in a study in November.

The company also withheld informatio­n about the harm that Instagram, which it owns, does to teenagers, Haugen’s lawyers say. One in three teenagers surveyed by the company, for instance, said using Instagram had made his or her body image worse.

The internal studies that show Facebook has known about its harms to children, and its role in inciting violence and health misinforma­tion, worry investors like Julie Goodridge, a portfolio manager for Northstar Asset Management. She, along with the New York state Comptrolle­r’s Office and other investment funds, filed a motion for the next shareholde­r meeting, calling for the removal of Zuckerberg’s power as majority voting shareholde­r.

“We care very much about bad behavior, and these are the kind of things that we believe hurt the company in the long run,” Goodridge said.

Gary Gensler, who took over the SEC in April, has said the agency needed to step up enforcemen­t when companies don’t adequately disclose informatio­n that could influence investors. In his first months in office, the agency appears to be broadening its scope to encompass how corporate decisions have broader social, environmen­tal and labor effects — the kinds of decisions that are a priority for some investors. It recently opened an investigat­ion into claims that Activision Blizzard, the gaming company, failed to disclose sexual harassment accusation­s to investors.

“Traditiona­lly, securities-fraud laws had been about stopping false or misleading statements on balance sheets — that would be the prosaic case,” said Kevin Haeberle, a professor at William & Mary Law School. “Now there is a political approach and movement to use securities law more broadly.”

Facebook is expected to fight any action taken by the SEC. The company has amassed an army of litigators from top multinatio­nal law firms in Washington, including experts in securities, antitrust, consumer protection and civil rights law. And it now has years of experience in fighting litigation by regulators, including the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general.

With a market value near $1 trillion, Facebook has been able to absorb regulatory penalties without much scar tissue, including a $100 million settlement with the SEC for failing to disclose data privacy risks and a record $5 billion settlement with the FTC, both in 2019.

The onus will now be on the securities regulators to take the documents provided by Haugen and show clear violations of corporate governance laws. Without proof of intent and recklessne­ss, Facebook will have grounds to dismiss a case, said Donald Langevoort, a securities law expert at Georgetown Law School.

“The tough part is to prove if they really misreprese­nted informatio­n or just framed it as opinion or puffery,” he said.

 ?? T.J. KIRKPATRIC­K / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Frances Haugen, the Facebook whistleblo­wer, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington on Oct. 5, 2021. Haugen said the Securities and Exchange Commission was the agency that she believed could rein in the company.
T.J. KIRKPATRIC­K / THE NEW YORK TIMES Frances Haugen, the Facebook whistleblo­wer, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington on Oct. 5, 2021. Haugen said the Securities and Exchange Commission was the agency that she believed could rein in the company.
 ?? JESSICA CHOU / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2019) ?? Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive of Facebook, is photograph­ed April 11, 2019, in Menlo Park, Calif. A case against top Facebook executives like Zuckerberg would have to show they explicitly knew that informatio­n that could sway investors had been hidden or lied about.
JESSICA CHOU / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2019) Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive of Facebook, is photograph­ed April 11, 2019, in Menlo Park, Calif. A case against top Facebook executives like Zuckerberg would have to show they explicitly knew that informatio­n that could sway investors had been hidden or lied about.

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