The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Zuckerberg now enabling Trump threats to protesters

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When it comes to curbing political manipulati­on on the internet, Mark Zuckerberg never seems to learn from his past mistakes.

At a time when we need our political and business leaders to be at their best, the Facebook CEO once again stands as an embarrassm­ent to the tech community. Zuckerberg has become an enabler of political manipulati­on who repeatedly chooses profits over principle.

A day of reckoning awaits the industry for Zuckerberg’s refusal to properly police lies and threats of violence on his social network.

We all value freedom of speech. But Zuckerberg fails to recognize it is not absolute — and that he has a responsibi­lity to stop incitement­s of violence and disinforma­tion.

President Trump clearly crossed the line last Friday, threatenin­g George Floyd protesters when he said “when the looting starts, the shooting starts” on Facebook and Twitter.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey rightly intervened, flagging the post as incendiary and “glorifying violence.” Then on Wednesday, Snap, which makes the Snapchat app, said it would stop promoting Trump’s account because his public comments could incite violence. But Zuckerberg refuses to do the same, despite workers’ insistence that the posts violated the company’s policy against violent rhetoric.

After hundreds of Facebook employees staged a virtual “walkout” on Monday in protest, Zuckerberg held an allhands video meeting Tuesday and made what was, at best, a lame defense of his position. His basic position remains that he does not want to be an “arbiter of truth.”

If he believes that, he needs to get out of the media business. Facebook is no longer just a platform. It is one of the world’s largest purveyors of news. As such, it’s Zuckerberg’s responsibi­lity to ferret out fact from fiction and determine when posts cross the line.

Nearly three dozen of Facebook’s earliest employees, including the company’s first chief of communicat­ions, agree. They wrote an open letter to Zuckerberg on Wednesday saying he was betraying Facebook’s

ideals.

It’s hardly the first time:

• In 2014, Facebook manipulate­d the news feeds of 700,000 users, removing either all of the positive posts or all of the negative posts to see how it affected their moods.

• In 2016, Facebook failed to recognize that Cambridge Analytica, a political data firm hired by President Trump’s election campaign, used the social media firm’s informatio­n on 50 million users in an effort to influence the behavior of American voters.

• In 2018, Facebook did nothing to figure out the facts on the ground and was forced to admit it was used to incite genocide in Myanmar.

Meanwhile, Zuckerberg continues to rake in profits. The Bloomberg Billionair­es Index last week ranked him the world’s third richest man with a net worth of about $87 billion, thanks in large part to Facebook’s 2.5 billion monthly users.

Meanwhile, Americans are left to live with the disinforma­tion and violence Zuckerberg perpetuate­s on his site.

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Mark Zuckerberg

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