Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Social media chiefs face Senate grilling

Facebook, Google and Twitter called

- MARCY GORDON

WASHINGTON — The CEOs of technology giants Facebook, Google and Twitter are expected to testify at an Oct. 28 Senate hearing on tech companies’ control over hate speech and misinforma­tion on their platforms.

The Senate Commerce Committee voted last week to authorize subpoenas for Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai of Google and Twitter’s Jack Dorsey to force them to testify if they didn’t agree to do so voluntaril­y.

Spokespeop­le for the companies said Monday that all three will cooperate.

The hearing “must be constructi­ve and focused on what matters most to the American people: how we work together to protect elections,” Twitter said in a tweet in its policy channel.

The hearing will come less than a week before Election Day. It marks a new bipartisan initiative against big tech companies, which have been under increasing scrutiny in Washington and from state attorneys general over issues of competitio­n, consumer privacy and hate speech.

The executives’ testimony is needed “to reveal the extent of influence that their companies have over American speech during a critical time in our democratic process,” said Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., who heads the Commerce Committee.

Facebook, meanwhile, is expanding restrictio­ns on political advertisin­g, including new bans on messages claiming widespread voter fraud. The new prohibitio­ns laid out in a blog post came days after President Donald Trump raised the prospect of mass fraud in the vote-by-mail process during a debate last week with former Vice President Joe Biden, his Democratic rival.

With Trump leading the way, conservati­ve Republican­s have kept up a barrage of criticism of Silicon Valley’s social media platforms, which they accuse of deliberate­ly suppressin­g conservati­ve views.

The Justice Department has asked Congress to roll back long-held legal protection­s for online platforms, putting down a legislativ­e marker in Trump’s drive against the social media giants.

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