Los Angeles Times

Dealing with disinforma­tion

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Facebook, Twitter and other major social media companies have once again removed hundreds of accounts from their services that were linked to foreign agents trying to meddle in U.S. affairs — as well as those of other government­s. The malefactor­s identified last week weren’t just Russians; they also included individual­s allied with the Iranian government, who’d apparently been using bogus identities to distribute propaganda at least since 2011.

So, what did President Trump have to say about Facebook et al. last week? He tweeted that the “Social Media Giants” are “silencing millions of people.” He added, “People have to figure out what is real, and what is not, without censorship!”

Trump seemed to have ignored the misdeeds of foreign players on social media, going to bat instead for Alex Jones, a conspiracy-peddling Trump ally who was recently banned or sanctioned by multiple outlets. He’s right that users of social media have an important role to play in combating disinforma­tion online. They need to stop believing — and gleefully spreading — the “news” planted by foreign agents. But it’s ridiculous to call for a hands-off approach that would let these platforms be weaponized by those eager to manipulate American opinion and weaken our democracy.

It’s bad enough that Trump has gone back and forth about whether Russia meddled in the 2016 election through its fake Facebook accounts and pages. What’s worse is that he and his GOP allies in Congress are actively pushing back against the companies’ efforts to clean up their platforms. Republican­s keep obsessing over supposed anti-conservati­ve bias rather than proven foreign meddling.

It’s not clear what, if anything, the public wants the government to do about all this. Surveys suggest that social media users want the companies to do a better job policing themselves, especially on privacy and security. A company enforcing its own rules against false or offensive speech isn’t censorship or a 1st Amendment violation; freespeech issues come into play only if the government does the policing.

Noting the lack of consensus, former CIA Director John Brennan — who called out the Russian meddling before the 2016 election, and whom Trump recently stripped of his security clearance for his sharp criticism of the president — said Congress should establish an independen­t, bipartisan commission to examine how to ensure safety, prosperity and liberties in a digital environmen­t that’s extending into more and more areas of daily life. In an interview Friday with the L.A. Times’ editorial board, Brennan said similar panels that examined the 9/11 attacks and the allegation­s of Iraqi weapons of mass destructio­n found areas of common ground and came up with useful reforms.

Meanwhile, the spotlight Congress has trained on the top social media companies has increased the pressure on them to take seriously a problem that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg once publicly waved off. The Trump administra­tion also has talked about responding more forcefully to malicious behavior online, which might finally provide a deterrent. But instead of leading, the president is underminin­g the efforts to protect social media users from honest-togoodness fake news.

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