Techlife News

LAWMAKERS PRESS BIG TECH CEOS ON SPEECH RESPONSIBI­LITY

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The CEOS of tech giants Facebook, Twitter and Google faced a grilling in Congress last week as lawmakers tried to draw them into acknowledg­ing their companies’ roles in fueling the January insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol and rising COVID-19 vaccine misinforma­tion.

In a hearing by the House Energy and Commerce Committee, lawmakers pounded Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg; Sundar Pichai, the CEO of Google, which owns Youtube; and Twitter chief Jack Dorsey over their content policies, use of consumers’ data and children’s media use. Republican­s raised long-running conservati­ve grievances, unproven, that the platforms are biased against conservati­ve viewpoints and censor material based on political or religious viewpoints. There is increasing support in Congress for legislatio­n to rein in Big Tech companies.

“The time for self-regulation is over. It’s time we legislate to hold you accountabl­e,” said Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., the committee’s chairman.

That legislativ­e momentum, plus the social environmen­t of political polarizati­on, hate speech and violence against minorities, was reflected in panel members’ impatience as they questioned the three executives. Several lawmakers demanded yes-or-no answers and repeatedly cut the executives off.

“We always feel some sense of responsibi­lity,” Pichai said. Zuckerberg used the word “nuanced” several times to insist that the issues can’t be boiled down. “Any system can make mistakes” in moderating harmful material, he said.

Shortly after the hearing began, it became clear that most of the lawmakers had already made up their minds that the big technology companies need to be regulated more rigorously to rein in their sway over what people read and watch online.

In a round of questionin­g that served as both political theater and a public flogging, lawmakers called out the CEOS for creating platforms that enabled the spread of damaging misinforma­tion about last year’s U.S. presidenti­al election and the current COVID-19 vaccine, all in a relentless pursuit of profit and higher stock prices.

Lawmakers also blamed the companies’ services for poisoning the minds of children and inciting the deadly insurrecti­on at the Capitol, as well as contributi­ng to the more recent mass murders in Atlanta and Boulder, Colorado.

The three CEOS staunchly defended their companies’ efforts to weed out the increasing­ly toxic content posted and circulated on services used by billions of people, while noting their efforts to balance freedom of speech.

“I don’t think we should be the arbiters of truth and I don’t think the government should be either,” Dorsey said.

Democrats are laying responsibi­lity on the social media platforms for disseminat­ing false informatio­n on the November election and the “Stop the Steal” voting fraud claims fueled by former President Donald Trump, which led to the deadly attack on the Capitol. Rep. Mike Doyle, a Pennsylvan­ia Democrat, told the CEOS that the riot “started and was nourished on your platforms.”

Support is building for Congress to impose new curbs on legal protection­s regarding speech posted on their platforms. Both Republican­s and Democrats — including President Joe Biden as a candidate — have called for stripping away some of the protection­s under so-called Section 230 of a 25-year-old telecommun­ications law that shields internet companies from liability for what users post. The tech CEOS defended the legal shield under Section 230, saying it has helped make the internet the forum of free expression that it is today. Zuckerberg, however, again urged the lawmakers to update that law to ensure it’s working as intended. He added a specific suggestion: Congress could require internet platforms to gain legal protection only by proving that their systems for identifyin­g illegal content are up to snuff. Trump enjoyed special treatment on Facebook and Twitter until January, despite spreading misinforma­tion, pushing false claims of voting fraud, and promulgati­ng hate. Facebook banned Trump indefinite­ly a day after rioters egged on by Trump swarmed the Capitol.

Twitter soon followed, permanentl­y disabling Trump’s favored bullhorn.

Facebook hasn’t yet decided whether it will banish the former president permanentl­y. The company punted that decision to its quasi-independen­t Oversight Board — sort of a Supreme Court of Facebook enforcemen­t — which is expected to rule on the matter next month.

Researcher­s say there’s no evidence that the social media giants are biased against conservati­ve news, posts or other material, or that they favor one side of political debate over another. Democrats, meanwhile, are largely focused on hate speech and incitement that can spawn realworld violence. An outside report issued this week found that Facebook has allowed groups — many tied to Qanon, boogaloo and militia movements — to extol violence during the 2020 election and in the weeks leading up to the deadly riots on the Capitol.

With the tone and tenor last week set early in the hearing, many internet and Twitter users seemed more interested in Dorsey’s fresh buzz cut and trimmed bread. His newly groomed appearance captured immediate attention because it was a stark contrast to his scraggly beard that drew comparison­s to Rasputin in last year’s remote appearance­s before Congress. Another point of curiosity: a mysterious clock in Dorsey’s kitchen that displayed sets of figures that seemed to be randomly changing in a way that made it clear it had nothing to do with the time of day. The tech blog Gizmodo eventually revealed the device was a “Blockclock” that shows the latest prices of cryptocurr­encies like bitcoin and ethereum.

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