LONDON — Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen told British lawmakers Monday that the social media giant stokes online hate and extremism, fails to protect children from harmful content and lacks any incentive to fix the problems, providing strong momentum for efforts by European governments working on stricter regulation of tech giants.
While her testimony echoed much of what she told the U.S. Senate earlier this month, her appearance drew intense interest from a British parliamentary committee that is much further along in drawing up legislation to crack down on social platforms.
It comes the same day that Facebook is set to release its latest earnings and that The Associated Press and other news organizations started publishing stories based on thousands of pages of internal company documents she obtained.
(I am of the opinion that if social media won't regulate themselves, then the government needs to step in and regulate them. Right now they ramp up hate by using targeted advertising, letting politicians and various hate groups give different messages to different audiences.)
The Internet is a wild animal. If hate groups don’t have mainstream outlets like Facebook and Instagram, they just, as Trump has, create their own media with no regulations or oversight. Agnostic is a perfect example, not of a hate group, but how easy it is to create a narrow view social media website.
Trump's media company will fail like all his other companies did.
@snytiger6 no doubt!