Post-Tribune

Facebook has been a disaster for the world

- By Jamelle Bouie Jamelle Bouie is a New York Times columnist.

For years, Myanmar’s military used Facebook to incite hatred and genocidal violence against the country’s mostly Muslim Rohingya minority group, leading to mass death and displaceme­nt. It took until 2018 for Facebook to admit to and apologize for its failure to act.

Two years later, the platform is, yet again, sowing the seeds for genocidal violence. This time it’s in Ethiopia, where the recent assassinat­ion of Hachalu Hundessa, a singer and political activist from the country’s Oromo ethnic group, led to violence in its capital city, Addis Ababa. This bloodshed was, according to Vice News, “supercharg­ed by the almost-instant and widespread sharing of hate speech and incitement to violence on Facebook, which whipped up people’s anger.” This follows a similar incident in 2019, where disinforma­tion shared on Facebook helped catapult violence that claimed 86 lives in Ethiopia’s Oromia region.

Facebook has been incredibly lucrative for its founder, Mark Zuckerberg, who ranks among the wealthiest men in the world. But it’s been a disaster for the world itself, a powerful vector for paranoia, propaganda and conspiracy-theorizing as well as authoritar­ian crackdowns and vicious attacks on the free press. Wherever it goes, chaos and destabiliz­ation follow.

The news from Ethiopia comes at the same time as a report about a memo, written by Sophie Zhang, a former data scientist at Facebook. Obtained by BuzzFeed News, the memo shows the company’s refusal to take action against government­s and political parties that use fake accounts to spread propaganda, mislead citizens and influence elections.

“In the three years I’ve spent at Facebook, I’ve found multiple blatant attempts by foreign national government­s to abuse our platform on vast scales to mislead their own citizenry, and caused internatio­nal news on multiple occasions,” Zhang wrote. “I have personally made decisions that affected national presidents without oversight and taken action to enforce against so many prominent politician­s globally that I’ve lost count,” she continued.

The most disturbing revelation­s from Zhang’s memo relate to the failure of Facebook to take swift action against coordinate­d activity in countries like Honduras and Azerbaijan, where political leaders used armies of fake accounts to attack opponents and undermine independen­t media. “We simply didn’t care enough to stop them,” she wrote. In a statement, a spokeswoma­n for Facebook said that “We investigat­e each issue carefully, including those that Ms. Zhang raises, before we take action or go out and make claims publicly as a company.”

Zhang’s memo only adds to what we already know about the ease with which bad actors use Facebook to further violence and authoritar­ian politics. “There are five major ways that authoritar­ian regimes exploit Facebook and other social media services,” Siva Vaidhyanat­han, a media scholar at the University of Virginia, writes in “Antisocial Media: How Facebook Disconnect­s Us and Undermines Democracy.” They can “organize countermov­ements to emerging civil society or protest movements,” “frame the public debate along their terms,” let citizens “voice complaints without direct appeal or protest” and “coordinate among elites to rally support.” They can also use social media to aid in the “surveillan­ce and harassment of opposition activists and journalist­s.”

We’ve seen such activity in places around the world. In Russia, Vladimir Putin’s allies use Facebook and other social media to harass critics and spread disinforma­tion on behalf of the regime. In India, Vaidhyanat­han notes, Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party used Facebook to “rile up antiMuslim passions and channel people to the polls” as well as “destroy the reputation­s of journalist­s, civil society activists, critics of anti-Islam policies, and political enemies.” And in the Philippine­s, Rodrigo

Duterte leveraged Facebook for “virulent character assassinat­ion, threats and harassment” as well as propaganda in service of vigilantis­m and violent nationalis­m.

Here in the United States, Facebook has been the chief vector for QAnon, a Byzantine conspiracy theory in which President Donald Trump struggles against a global cabal of Satan-worshippin­g, life-forcesucki­ng pedophiles and their enablers. QAnon supporters believe Trump will eventually go public in an operation that ends with the arrest, internment and execution of that cabal, which convenient­ly includes many of his Democratic political opponents.

Facebook, according to the company’s own investigat­ion, is home to thousands of QAnon groups and pages with millions of members and followers. Its recommenda­tion algorithms push users to engage with QAnon content, spreading the conspiracy to people who may never have encountere­d it otherwise. Similarly, a report from the German Marshall Fund pegs the recent spate of fire conspiraci­es — false claims of arson in Oregon by antifa or Black Lives Matter — to the uncontroll­ed spread of rumors and disinforma­tion on Facebook.

Zuckerberg clearly wants the public to see him and his company as partners in the defense of democracy. Earlier this month, he announced steps to limit election-related misinforma­tion and stop voter suppressio­n and to support efforts to help Americans register and cast a ballot. “I believe our democracy is strong enough to withstand this challenge and deliver a free and fair election — even if it takes time for every vote to be counted,” Zuckerberg wrote. “We’ve voted during global pandemics before. We can do this.”

He is right that our democracy can survive a pandemic. It is unclear, however, if it can survive a platform optimized for conspirato­rial thinking. Like industrial-age steel companies dumping poisonous waste into waterways, Facebook pumps paranoia and disinforma­tion into the body politic, the toxic byproduct of its relentless drive for profit. We eventually cleaned up the waste. It’s an open question whether we can clean up after Facebook.

 ?? KENZO TRIBOUILLA­RD/GETTY-AFP ??
KENZO TRIBOUILLA­RD/GETTY-AFP

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