Revealed: the Facebook loophole that lets world leaders deceive and harass their citizens
Also: How Facebook let fake engagement distort global politics: a whistleblower's account (The Guardian)
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Source: The Guardian
The Facebook loophole
Revealed: the Facebook loophole that lets world leaders deceive and harass their citizens
A Guardian investigation exposes the breadth of state-backed manipulation of the platform
Julia Carrie Wong in San Francisco
@juliacarriew
Mon 12 Apr 2021 04.00 EDT
Facebook has repeatedly allowed world leaders and politicians to use its platform to deceive the public or harass opponents despite being alerted to evidence of the wrongdoing.
The Guardian has seen extensive internal documentation showing how Facebook handled more than 30 cases across 25 countries of politically manipulative behavior that was proactively detected by company staff.
The investigation shows how Facebook has allowed major abuses of its platform in poor, small and non-western countries in order to prioritize addressing abuses that attract media attention or affect the US and other wealthy countries. The company acted quickly to address political manipulation affecting countries such as the US, Taiwan, South Korea and Poland, while moving slowly or not at all on cases in Afghanistan, Iraq, Mongolia, Mexico, and much of Latin America.
There is a lot of harm being done on Facebook that is not being responded to because it is not considered enough of a PR risk to Facebook, said Sophie Zhang, a former data scientist at Facebook who worked within the companys integrity organization to combat inauthentic behavior. The cost isnt borne by Facebook. Its borne by the broader world as a whole.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/apr/12/facebook-loophole-state-backed-manipulation
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Source: The Guardian
The Facebook loophole
How Facebook let fake engagement distort global politics: a whistleblower's account
The inside story of Sophie Zhangs battle to combat rampant manipulation as executives delayed and deflected
by Julia Carrie Wong in San Francisco
Mon 12 Apr 2021 04.00 EDT
Shortly before Sophie Zhang lost access to Facebooks systems, she published one final message on the companys internal forum, a farewell tradition at Facebook known as a badge post.
Officially, Im a low-level [data scientist] whos being fired today for poor performance, the post began. In practice, in the 2.5 years Ive spent at Facebook, Ive
found multiple blatant attempts by foreign national governments to abuse our platform on vast scales to mislead their own citizenry, and caused international news on multiple occasions.
Over the course of 7,800 scathing words, Zhang outlined Facebooks failure to combat political manipulation campaigns akin to what Russia had done in the 2016 US election. We simply didnt care enough to stop them, she wrote. I know that I have blood on my hands by now.
Zhang knew that this was not a tale that Facebook wanted her to tell, so when she hit publish, she also launched a password-protected website with a copy of the memo and provided the link and password to Facebook employees. Not only did Facebook temporarily delete the post internally, the company also contacted Zhangs hosting service and domain registrar and forced her website offline.
Now, with the US election over and a new president inaugurated, Zhang is coming forward to tell the whole story on the record. (Excerpts of her memo were first published in September by BuzzFeed News.) This article is based on extensive internal documentation seen by the Guardian.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/apr/12/facebook-fake-engagement-whistleblower-sophie-zhang