Santa Cruz Sentinel

Boards for Meta, Twitter face backlash from NY pension fund

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SAN FRANCISCO >> A major New York pension fund that has invested in both Facebook's corporate parent and Twitter believes it's time to shake up the companies' boards of directors because of their inability to keep violent content off their influentia­l social media services.

The New York State Common Retirement Fund outlined its grievances with Facebook owner Meta Platforms and Twitter in separate May 19 letters that were filed Monday with the Securities and Exchange Commission in advance of the companies' annual shareholde­r meetings.

The letters from New York Comptrolle­r Thomas P. DiNapoli chastised Facebook and Twitter for failing to prevent the distributi­on of a video clips and screen shootings of the mass killings that occurred May 14 in a Buffalo, New York, supermarke­t. The shooting spree was livestream­ed by the self-described white supremacis­t accused of killing 10 people on Twitch, a video gaming service owned by Amazon, which said it blocked the video within two minutes.

But the disturbing scenes from that video have continued to crop up on Facebook and Twitter, prompting DiNapoli to lash out at the companies' for their failure to “control the disseminat­ion of hate speech and content that incites violence.”

In protest, DeNapoli said the pension funds would vote against the Meta and Twitter directors who are seeking to be re-elected to the companies' respective board meetings Wednesday and will urge other investors to dissent, too.

Nine Meta directors, including company CEO and controllin­g shareholde­r Mark Zuckerberg, are up for re-election. Only two of Twitter's nine continuing directors need to be reelected at this year's annual meeting. The terms of the seven other Twitter directors either expire next year or 2024. By then, they could be gone if Tesla CEO Elon Musk completes a proposed $44 billion purchase of Twitter that is currently in limbo.

Both Meta and Twitter declined to comment on DeNapoli's letter but defended their content controls, including their efforts to prevent the images of the Buffalo shooting from reappearin­g.

The New York pension fund's opposition to the boards of Meta and Twitter seems unlikely to result in a change since it doesn't rank among the 15 largest shareholde­rs at either company, according to FactSet Research.

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