The New Zealand Herald

Technology

Social networks may end up having to dump naive goal of being platforms for all

- Juha Saarinen comment

To the surprise of precisely nobody, managing more than 1.2 billion users on a platform that doesn’t really care what they do and say as long as it’s not obviously illegal has turned out to be beyond both people and clever computer algorithms.

In a strange twist over an increasing­ly heated debate over online fake news and damaging misinforma­tion, founder Mark Zuckerberg rushed to Facebook’s defence against Donald Trump over the weekend, after the United States President declared the social network a foe.

The irony of Trump attacking Facebook is mind-blowing, given how the latter was used as a propaganda tool to get the current US President elected, but few things surprise any more in 2017.

Trump’s attack did mean that Zuckerberg has now been forced to admit that Russian ads, antiClinto­n memes and trolls who impersonat­ed Muslims to stir up hatred and bigotry might have tilted the election.

“After the election, I made a

There is no such thing as free speech where anything goes anywhere in the world.

comment that I thought the idea misinforma­tion on Facebook changed the outcome of the election was a crazy idea. Calling that crazy was dismissive and I regret it. This is too important an issue to be dismissive [sic],” Zuckerberg wrote.

Yes, it is a rather important issue. Even though Zuckerberg claims the net effect of Facebook on the election was positive, he’s had to promise defences against nation state actors trying to subvert democracy; clearly, his notion of Facebook being “a platform for all ideas” isn’t quite as all-encompassi­ng as it seems.

Twitter, a minnow compared with Facebook with “only” some 328 million monthly active users, has similar problems with trollbots while pondering doubling the size of tweets.

Hundreds of Russia-linked Twitter troll accounts that tried to foment anger against the US National Football League players’ “take a knee” protest have now been deleted, but how many more are there left?

It’s hard to imagine it never occurred to the Zuck, @jack and @biz that technology-driven media platforms that profess no specific values and have enormous reach can be perfect tools for negative communicat­ion, bullying and informatio­n warfare.

If the Chinese get it, and not just ban but block Facebook, Twitter et al rather than risking their population catching undesirabl­e “influenca” from them, you’d think the social networks would have some inkling as to the power, positive and negative, they wield.

There is no such thing as free speech where anything goes anywhere in the world.

That inconvenie­nt fact clashes with the social network business model, a numbers game with as few barriers to entry for users as possible, and a fervent desire to keep people on board once they’ve joined.

This is why you won’t see anything Nazi-related on German Twitter where such material is banned by law, but it will be visible elsewhere in the world, and the accounts responsibl­e for it remain active.

Such a reactive approach to limiting hate speech and misinforma­tion is guaranteed to anger politician­s profoundly and goad them into drastic measures such as content blocking, splitting up the companies themselves or blocking them as China does.

The social networks are living dangerousl­y here, and may end up having to dump the naive goal of being platforms for all.

It’s never worked in the history of humanity, and technology isn’t going to fix that.

 ?? Picture / Bloomberg ?? Mark Zuckerberg has had to admit Russian ads, antiClinto­n memes and fake-Muslim trolls on Facebook might have tilted the US election.
Picture / Bloomberg Mark Zuckerberg has had to admit Russian ads, antiClinto­n memes and fake-Muslim trolls on Facebook might have tilted the US election.
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