San Francisco Chronicle

Congress’ Facebook relationsh­ip? It’s complicate­d

- By Kevin Roose

WASHINGTON — When it comes to regulating Facebook, Congress is in over its head. But does that matter?

Last week’s marathon testimony by CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed the limited understand­ing many lawmakers have of what Facebook is and how it works. Members of Congress came with a mixed bag of concerns for Zuckerberg, including a few incisive points about Facebook’s privacy and data collection policies and a lot of off-topic ramblings about how computers work, but these questions never amounted to a unified theory of Facebook’s troubles, or suggestion­s of how they might be solved.

It’s tempting to claim that technologi­cal illiteracy is the problem — that some older and tech-phobic lawmakers are fundamenta­lly incapable of regulating Facebook properly.

But the biggest obstacle to regulating Facebook is not Congress’ lack of computer literacy, which gave Zuckerberg the upper hand this week. It’s a lack of political will, and an unwillingn­ess to identify the problems they’re trying to fix in the first place.

After all, Congress typically does not require subject-matter expertise of its members. Most politician­s in Washington did not understand the complexiti­es of mortgage-backed securities in 2009, when Wall Street executives testified in the wake of the financial crisis. The lawmakers also are not pharmaceut­ical experts, or transporta­tion policy wonks or deeply knowledgea­ble in many of the

other complex issues that come before them. And yet, Congress — with the help of staff experts and outside advisers — has managed to pass sweeping legislatio­n to prevent excesses and bad behavior in those sectors.

“It’s never an issue of the members being able to do it — their staff is often incredibly dedicated and can dig into these issues,” said Ashkan Soltani, a former chief technologi­st at the Federal Trade Commission. The challenge, Soltani said, is that there’s a “lost in translatio­n” problem of trying to condense complex, multifacet­ed issues into easily digested sound bites that will play well with constituen­ts.

“This isn’t just about news,” Soltani said of Facebook’s issues. “It’s not just about privacy and commercial­ization, it’s not just about political speech. It’s all of those things and more.”

If Congress wants to rein in Facebook’s enormous power — and the questions lawmakers asked left little doubt that it does — then the first step is identifyin­g what, specifical­ly, they think is wrong with Facebook.

Is it that Facebook is too cavalier about sharing user data with outside organizati­ons?

Is it that Facebook collects too much data about users in the first place?

Is it that Facebook is promoting addictive messaging products to children?

Is it that Facebook’s news feed is polarizing society, pushing people to ideologica­l fringes?

Is it that Facebook is too easy for political operatives to exploit, or that it does not do enough to keep false news and hate speech off users’ feeds?

Is it that Facebook is simply too big, or a monopoly that needs to be broken up?

All of these are concerns lawmakers brought up, and they would all require different and narrowly tailored regulatory solutions.

For example, Congress’ goal may be to stop outside companies from getting access to people’s Facebook data — avoiding another scandal like the one involving Cambridge Analytica, the political consulting firm that improperly obtained data on up to 87 million Facebook users. Lawmakers could propose a bill that would prevent large social media services from opening themselves up to outside developers. (They should note, though, that Facebook has already limited the data available to outside companies, so this would not necessaril­y have the intended effect.)

Congress could address the issue of data collection by adopting European-style data protection policies, requiring stronger user controls for personal informatio­n or requiring social networks to delete certain types of user data automatica­lly after a given time.

If it wanted to, Congress could address the issue of hateful content by adopting strict hate speech laws like the ones that exist in Germany, which make social media services liable if they fail to remove hate speech in a timely manner.

It could address the problem of transparen­cy in political ads by passing the Honest Ads Act, a bill that would subject online political ads to similar disclosure standards as TV and radio political ads. (Zuckerberg has already indicated that he supports the measure, so this should be an easy one.)

Or, if it decides that Facebook is just too darn big, Congress could spearhead an effort to break it up.

All of these are theoretica­lly possible outcomes, depending on which of Facebook’s many issues lawmakers decide to address. Lawmakers do not need to be computer scientists, or to come up with an omnibus bill to address all of the Menlo Park company’s flaws in one fell swoop. It could pick off one issue at a time, consult with the experts and take a piecemeal approach.

But first, it needs to understand which pieces need fixing, and how to carry out fixes without creating unintended consequenc­es. And it needs to demonstrat­e that it has the political resolve to push these changes through, even as the tech industry furiously lobbies against them, as it undoubtedl­y will.

Perhaps the most dispiritin­g exchange all week was when Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., asked Zuckerberg about Facebook’s market power, and the notion that it is too dominant for any other social network to compete with.

“Is there an alternativ­e to Facebook in the private sector?” Graham asked.

Zuckerberg dodged the question, saying that people use lots of apps to communicat­e.

“You don’t feel like you have a monopoly?” Graham wondered.

“It certainly doesn’t feel that way to me,” Zuckerberg said.

By raising the issue of Facebook’s lack of competitio­n, Graham was circling around an important point. Facebook has, indeed, taken steps to acquire or crush multiple apps that have posed a competitiv­e threat. It even runs a service called Onavo, which allows it to keep tabs on which other apps its users are using and functions as a kind of early-warning system for possible competitor­s.

But when it came time to draw the conclusion his questions had been leading to — that Facebook’s primary problem was its size, and that regulation should address its anticompet­itive tendencies — Graham pulled his punches, even asking Zuckerberg for advice about regulating his own company.

“Would you work with us in terms of what regulation­s you think are necessary in your industry?” Graham asked.

The hearings proved that a groundswel­l of support is building on Capitol Hill to regulate Facebook and other Internet companies. But until Congress stops asking these companies how they want to be regulated and starts making its own decisions about what problems it wants to fix, its targets will continue to slip through its fingers.

 ?? Win McNamee / AFP / Getty Images ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies at a hearing before two Senate committees in Washington.
Win McNamee / AFP / Getty Images Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies at a hearing before two Senate committees in Washington.

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