The Day

GOP senators berate Facebook, Twitter CEOs, who say they did their best

Zuckerberg, Dorsey defend efforts to reduce spread of disinforma­tion

- By BRIAN CONTRERAS

Washington — The CEOs of Twitter and Facebook defended their efforts to reduce the spread of online disinforma­tion about the presidenti­al election and the integrity of the U.S. voting system Tuesday as they faced an onslaught of criticism from Senate Republican­s who accused the tech giants of censoring conservati­ve views and favoring Democrats.

Testifying before Congress for the second time in three weeks, Twitter Chief Executive Jack Dorsey and his Facebook counterpar­t, Mark Zuckerberg, told lawmakers on the Senate Judiciary Committee that their companies did the best they could in unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces, though they acknowledg­ed making mistakes while moderating content.

“We are facing something that feels impossible,” Dorsey said. “We are required to help increase the health of the public conversati­on while at the same time ensuring that as many people as possible can participat­e.”

Amid heightened concerns about the integrity of voting and the spread of disinforma­tion, Twitter and Facebook have taken aggressive steps to moderate posts concerning the election. They slapped labels on tweets and Facebook posts by President Donald Trump warning that the messages might contain false informatio­n. They also suppressed the spread of a New York Post story critical of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden.

Republican­s saw such efforts as evidence that some of Silicon Valley’s biggest tech firms were on the side of Democrats and Biden. Democrats, on the other hand, argued the companies had not done enough to limit the spread of falsehoods by Trump and others assailing the integrity of the nation’s election system.

Senate Republican­s were particular­ly incensed about how Twitter and Facebook handled a story published by the New York Post concerning emails purportedl­y sent between Biden’s son Hunter and leadership at the Ukrainian gas company Burisma, on the board of which Hunter Biden sat. During the final weeks before the election, the Post’s story became ammunition for Republican­s claiming that the Biden family was corrupt, even as Democrats and many media outlets questioned the veracity of the emails and framed the story as a coordinate­d disinforma­tion campaign.

Twitter temporaril­y blocked the story from being shared at all, citing a since-changed policy against publishing hacked materials, and locked the Post’s Twitter account. Meanwhile, Facebook said it would reduce the article’s distributi­on until it was verified.

“There are rules about what a television station can do; there are rules about what a newspaper can do,” committee Chairman Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said. “What I want to try to find out is, if you’re not a newspaper — Twitter or Facebook — then why do you have editorial control over the New York Post?”

Dorsey, reiteratin­g testimony he gave last month before another Senate committee, said that Twitter took action based on its terms of service that users agree to when signing up for the platform. He testified that his company walked back its efforts soon thereafter, informing the Post about how to unlock its account and freeing the media outlet to repost the same article.

Zuckerberg acknowledg­ed that Facebook’s efforts to moderate content were imperfect. “Unfortunat­ely, when we handle millions or billions of pieces of content a day, while we strive to do as well as possible and be as precise as possible, we will make some mistakes,” he testified, adding that he believed it might be time to “update the rules for the internet” and that the tech platforms “would benefit from clearer guidance from elected officials.”

At the heart of the day’s debate was Section 230 of the 1996 Telecommun­ications Act, the law that establishe­s that web platforms aren’t responsibl­e for what their users post but can still conduct good-faith moderation of that content. Both Trump and Biden have called for Section 230 to be reconsider­ed, albeit for very different reasons, with Republican­s typically favoring less moderation and Democrats typically calling for more.

Facebook is being sued over allegation­s it monitors private messages on the social network to surreptiti­ously gather even more informatio­n on its users and share the data with marketers.

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