The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Senators blast Facebook, Twitter, Google in Russia probe

- By Tom Lobianco and Ryan Nakashima

WASHINGTON » Exasperate­d U.S. senators harshly criticized representa­tives of Facebook, Twitter and Google at a hearing Tuesday for not doing more to prevent Russian agents interferin­g with the American political process as early as 2015.

At one point, Sen. Al Franken shook his head after he couldn’t get all the companies to commit to not accepting political ads bought with North Korean currency.

The hearing by a subcommitt­ee of the Senate Judiciary panel was moved last week into a cavernous hearing room usually reserved for high-profile events like Supreme Court confirmati­ons. About 50 people waited to get in as senators fired pointed questions and waved at cardboard displays of outrageous ads.

“People are buying ads on your platform with rubles. They are political ads,” Franken fumed. “You put billions of data points together all the time . ... Google has all knowledge that man has ever developed. You can’t put together rubles with a political ad and go like, ‘Hmmm, those data points spell out something pretty bad?’ “

Technology company representa­tives fumbled at points. After Franken pointed out foreign spending on U.S. political campaigns is illegal, Google’s director of law enforcemen­t and informatio­n security, Richard Salgado, replied only that the search giant would refuse political ads paid with foreign currency “if it’s a good enough signal on illegality.”

“In hindsight, we should have had a broader lens,” said Facebook’s general counsel, Colin Stretch.

The companies all pledged to do more and politely said they understood the seriousnes­s with which lawmakers are taking the question of Russian meddling.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar pressured the representa­tives to support her “Honest Ads” bill, which she is co-sponsoring with Sen. Mark Warner and Sen. John McCain, and which would bring political ad rules from TV, radio and print to the internet.

She dismissed pledges from the companies this week to be more transparen­t about political ads as an unenforcea­ble “patchwork” of self-policing.

“We’re not waiting for legislatio­n,” said Stretch, before Klobuchar cut him off and repeated her demand for a yes or no answer.

“We stand ready to work with you and your co-sponsors on that legislatio­n going forward,” Stretch replied, echoed by Twitter’s and Google’s representa­tives.

Louisiana Sen. John Kennedy browbeat Stretch into admitting that Facebook had no way of knowing the true identity of all of the 5 million advertiser­s that use its platform every month.

“Of course, the answer is no,” Stretch said.

The hearing — the first of three this week in which the three tech giants face a public grilling — comes amid the increasing pace of investigat­ions into the Trump administra­tion’s possible link to Russia.

Court papers unsealed Monday revealed an indictment against President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and a guilty plea by another adviser, who admitted to lying to the FBI about meetings with Russian intermedia­ries.

Just five of the full committee’s 11 Republican­s attended the Senate subcommitt­ee hearing, while all nine Democrats showed up.

On Wednesday, representa­tives of all three companies face hearings by the House and Senate intelligen­ce committees.

In preparatio­n for Tuesday’s hearing, Facebook disclosed that content generated by Russia’s infamous troll farm, the Internet Research Agency, potentiall­y reached as many as 126 million users.

The company said IRAlinked accounts generated 80,000 posts on 120 pages between January 2015 and August 2017. Possible views reached the millions after people liked the posts and shared them.

Facebook had earlier turned over more than 3,000 advertisem­ents linked to the agency. The ads — many of which focused on divisive social issues like immigratio­n and gay rights — pointed people to the agency’s pages, where they could then like or share its material.

Twitter said it uncovered and shut down 2,752 accounts linked to the IRA, nearly 14 times as many as it handed over to congressio­nal committees three weeks ago.

The Russia-linked accounts put out 1.4 million election-related tweets from September through Nov. 15 last year — nearly half of them automated. The company also found nine Russian accounts that bought ads, most of which came from the state-backed news service RT, previously known as Russia Today.

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