Los Angeles Times

Face time with Zuckerberg

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Re “Senators vent at Facebook but waver on action,” April 11

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg appeared more calm and sincere testifying in Congress than any lawmaker. But I’m not entirely sure why he was even hauled in.

I don’t care who accesses my informatio­n on Facebook. I really don’t. I’m a big girl. I can navigate targeted ads just fine. And I never take news at face value, fake or otherwise, without conducting my own due diligence. As long as my bank accounts, my home and my family are safe from actual intrusion, I’m good.

Still, manipulati­ng a more vulnerable person should never happen, and because of the internet, increases in this unsavory tactic may require better transparen­cy of all media platforms.

But before focusing on Facebook, our lawmakers should fix voter registrati­on and gerrymande­ring. Those have far greater influence on election outcomes than any fake news or foreign-sponsored targeted ads on social media. Lisa Harmon Yakima, Wash.

The chasm between a young innovator who has changed the world (not necessaril­y for the better) and the more senior senators was so wide and so deep they might as well have been shouting across the Grand Canyon.

Zuckerberg was calm and collected and sat up straight. He was polite and courteous to the elder statesmen conducting this hearing. He looked like he was called into the principal’s office for a scolding.

Yet underneath that polite exterior, he knew exactly how to outmaneuve­r the senators. He did not truly answer their probing questions of just how to stop the intrusiven­ess and prying eyes and ears of this 21st century Big Brother from controllin­g us.

The internet killed privacy, and now we are just beginning to notice the frightenin­g consequenc­es. It is time to look up from our devices and start paying attention to what is all around us. Frances Terrell Lippman

Sherman Oaks

The essence of Facebook’s business model is selling users’ personal data to advertiser­s for microtarge­ting and sometimes even fake news. It’s what made Zuckerberg a billionair­e.

How about creating an alternativ­e to Facebook called, say, “Safebook”? It would allow users to communicat­e with friends and family but give them total control over their personal data. It would be less lucrative than Facebook, but maybe it could be organized as a not-for-profit company, a public utility or even a cooperativ­e owned by its users.

Perhaps there are some internet billionair­es with a conscience who would invest in “Safebook” so it could compete with Facebook’s quasi-monopoly by offering real privacy. Miles Mogulescu Malibu

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