The Columbus Dispatch

Whistleblo­wer calls for swift action

Haugen testifies before Congress, encourages laws targeting social media

- Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON – Ex-facebook employee and whistleblo­wer Frances Haugen implored lawmakers Wednesday to avert the usual congressio­nal stalemates as they weigh proposals to curb abuses on social media platforms by limiting the companies’ free-speech protection­s against legal liability.

“Facebook wants you to get caught up in a long, drawn out debate over the minutiae of different legislativ­e approaches. Please don’t fall into that trap,” Haugen testified at a hearing by a House Energy and Commerce subcommitt­ee. “Time is of the essence. There is a lot at stake here. You have a once-in-ageneratio­n opportunit­y to create new rules for our online world. I came forward, at great personal risk, because I believe we still have time to act. But we must act now.”

Lawmakers brought forward proposals after Haugen presented a case in October that Facebook’s systems amplify online hate and extremism and fail to protect young users from harmful content.

Her previous disclosure­s have energized legislativ­e and regulatory efforts around the world aimed at cracking down on Big Tech, and she made a series of appearance­s recently before European lawmakers and officials who are drawing up rules for social media companies.

Haugen, a data scientist who worked as a product manager in Facebook’s civic integrity unit, buttressed her assertions with a massive trove of internal company documents she secretly copied and provided to federal securities regulators and Congress.

When she made her first public appearance this fall, laying out a farreachin­g condemnati­on of the social network giant before a Senate Commerce subcommitt­ee, she shared how she believes Facebook’s platforms could

be made safer and offered prescripti­ons for action by Congress. She rejected the idea of breaking up the tech giant, favoring instead targeted legislativ­e remedies.

Most notably, they include new curbs on the long-standing legal protection­s for speech posted on social media platforms. Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have called for stripping away some of the protection­s granted by a provision in a 25-year-old law – generally known as Section 230 – that shields internet companies from liability for what users post.

“Let’s work together on bipartisan legislatio­n because we can’t continue to wait,” said Rep. Mike Doyle, D-PA., the chairman of the communicat­ions and technology subcommitt­ee. The tech giants want nothing more than partisan division and dithering over the legislatio­n, he said.

Facebook and other social media companies use computer algorithms to rank and recommend content. They govern what shows up on users’ news feeds. Haugen’s idea is to remove the protection­s in cases where dominant content driven by algorithms favors massive engagement by users over public safety.

“Facebook will not change until the incentives change,” Haugen told the House panel. “I hope that you guys act because our children deserve much better.”

That’s the thought behind the Justice Against Malicious Algorithms Act, which was introduced by senior House Democrats about a week after Haugen testified to the Senate panel in October. The bill would hold social media companies responsibl­e by removing their protection under Section 230 for tailored recommenda­tions to users that are deemed to cause harm. A platform would lose the immunity in cases where it “knowingly or recklessly” promoted harmful content.

Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., who heads the full Energy and Commerce committee, said a proposal from its senior Republican, Rep. Cathy Mcmorris Rodgers of Washington, isn’t identical to the Democrats’ bill but represents a good start for potential compromise.

“Big Tech should not be the arbiter of truth,” Rodgers said, renewing conservati­ves’ assertions that social media platforms censor those viewpoints. Rodgers’ proposal would allow conservati­ves to challenge the platforms’ content decisions.

All of the legislativ­e proposals face a heavy lift toward final enactment by Congress.

Some experts who support stricter regulation of social media say the Democrats’ legislatio­n as written could have unintended consequenc­es. It doesn’t make clear enough which specific algorithmi­c behaviors would lead to loss of the liability protection, they suggest, making it hard to see how it would work in practice and leading to wide disagreeme­nt over what it might actually do.

Meta Platforms, the new name of Facebook’s parent company, has declined to comment on specific legislativ­e proposals. The company says it has long advocated for updated regulation­s.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has suggested changes that would only give internet platforms legal protection if they can prove that their systems for identifyin­g illegal content are up to snuff. That requiremen­t, however, might be more difficult for smaller tech companies and startups to meet, leading critics to charge that it would ultimately favor Facebook.

Other social media companies have urged caution in any legislativ­e changes to Section 230.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSK/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Former Facebook employee Frances Haugen speaks Wednesday during a hearing of the Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommitt­ee on Communicat­ions and Technology on Capitol Hill.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSK/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Former Facebook employee Frances Haugen speaks Wednesday during a hearing of the Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommitt­ee on Communicat­ions and Technology on Capitol Hill.

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