Sentinel & Enterprise

Stop feeding the Meta monster

- By Nolan Finley

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg launched his latest social media platform, Threads, one day after a federal judge in Louisiana ruled the Biden administra­tion likely colluded with Facebook and other such sites to censor unfavorabl­e views during the pandemic.

The connection between the two events went largely unremarked upon. Progressiv­es were just tickled that Zuckerberg was mounting a competitiv­e challenge to Twitter and its dastardly owner Elon Musk, who dared to challenge their exclusive grip on social media, that they didn’t want to be bothered with the danger of Facebook’s informatio­n empire gaining even more dominance.

Meta, Facebook’s parent company, reported 30 million sign-ups in the first hours after the launch of Threads, an app that looks remarkably similar to Twitter. That number is bound to keep soaring, since Threads is linked to another Zuckerberg company, Instagram, which has 2.35 billion active monthly users.

Zuckerberg has not proved to be a good steward of such enormous power, Finley writes.

Facebook itself has nearly 3 billion accounts, while yet another Meta enterprise, Whatsapp, boasts of 2.75 billion active monthly users.

Even assuming generous overlap among Meta’s various user bases, it’s a fair estimate that on any given day Zuckerberg’s online products are reaching up to half the world’s population.

Zuckerberg has not proved to be a good steward of such enormous power, as the Louisiana court ruling suggests.

District Judge Terry

Doughty, issued a sweeping ruling banning a long list of federal officials, including White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-pierre and all employees of the Justice Department and FBI, from having contact with Facebook and other social media sites for the purpose of infringing on First Amendment rights.

The judge declared the cooperatio­n between the White House and social media companies to censor speech “Orwellian.” Facebook was the key player.

Zuckerberg has acknowledg­ed taking regular calls from administra­tion officials during the pandemic, and that Facebook censored posts later proved to be true at the behest of federal health officials who wanted to control the COVID-19 narrative.

This came at a time when Americans needed and deserved the maximum amount of informatio­n about a virus that was threatenin­g their lives and livelihood­s.

And yet the most powerful government officials were conspiring with the world’s most powerful informatio­n company to limit and distort that informatio­n. And for one purpose: Tomake the people more pliable and easier to control. Orwellian indeed.

Zuckerberg also has used his immense influence to put his thumb on the political scale. In 2020, he spent $400 million to fund local election operations. One of the efforts he backed sent $144 million to eight swing states, 90% of which went to counties that supported Joe Biden.

Conservati­ves have long complained of being censored by Facebook and other social media sites, a claim Zuckerberg and his counterpar­ts deny. But he clearly has an interest in politics, and the ability to sway the electoral process by controllin­g the informatio­n his users see.

And now he has another tool to use, and too little competitio­n. Twitter, with its 450 million active monthly users, is a poor counter tometa’s universe.

Follow the thread. The potential reach of Zuckerberg’s new site and his propensity for censorship are not healthy for a nation that depends on the free flow of informatio­n.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES ?? In an aerial view, people gather in front of a sign posted at Meta headquarte­rs on July 7, 2023, in Menlo Park, California.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES In an aerial view, people gather in front of a sign posted at Meta headquarte­rs on July 7, 2023, in Menlo Park, California.

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