Threading thoughts from UK Parliament hearing with social media platforms. First up is Facebook including Antigone Davis who testified a few weeks ago to US Senate. @DamianCollins is already drilling down on FB's research very much exposing Facebook's negligence and spinning. /1
MP Collins did a breathtaking job in unpacking the issues, the lack of answers to accountability. Here is how he closed revealing only 4% of Facebook's $275B in profits went toward safety and security. Watch for the drink of the water glass. It’s a facebook tell. /2
This was after @DamianCollins probed on where decision making actually happens. In 2018, all answers were “the buck stops with Mark.” Now with the SEC complaints and plethora of lawsuits about governance, control, insider trading, it seems Facebook’s talking point went vague. /3
I’ll catch up and share thoughts from other MPs. Just focused on watching. Side note, remote evidence is such a problem here. Facebook’s Davis is clearly looking to her right of camera getting answer flip cards. /4
Baroness Kidron followed with probing on trust and whether or not Facebook is a system fit for purpose. She will later follow-up on whether there is a need for liability for directors since Facebook's policies are clearly not working. /5
Next up @MrJohnNicolson probed into the details of the Instagram research. He also asked why Apple needed to step in to get Facebook to actually step up its efforts to reduce use of its platforms for human trafficking. /6
Once again, we're back at trying to get a simple answer on who is the ultimate decision maker on the decisions to make adjustments to algorithmic amplification. Facebook once again dodges this, there is an obvious effort to avoid putting anyone's name to it - even the CEO. /7
wow, @DarrenPJones is new to me and providing outstanding line of questions. He starts with who/how Facebook's Davis reports into the Risk and Audit Committee of Facebook's board. She doesn't. This is the precise governance issue on table with several current lawsuits. /8
Several questions regarding Facebook's shutting off NYU researchers to they cannot study how Facebook microtargets and spreads content and ads. FB leans into scraping stating it's a privacy issue but says it's not about privacy and really makes no sense at all to any audience. /9
Bingo. Here was @MrJohnNicolson: “all of this suggests Facebook is an abuse facilitator that only reacts when you’re under threat either from terrible publicity or from companies for example like Apple that threaten you financially.” /10
Again, this was super weird. I didn’t know she and Potts report into Joel Kaplan who is a lightning rod and shouldn’t be anywhere near “safety and security” but then she skips over Nick Clegg and goes straight to the top. Why? And why doesn’t she know these answers? /11
Here was @darrenpjones. As the pension lawsuits in Delaware related to the $5B cover-up settlement claim, there is a lack of governance at Facebook driving lack of accountability. It’s also insane she doesn’t know the details of the bill. /12
Facebook’s answer is a mess here on why NYU researchers were cut off and falsely claimed it was a privacy issue. @DamianCollins gets in a point on Facebooks cover-up with Cambridge Analytica as he’s well-versed on it. /13 cc @LauraEdelson2
This exchange requires two clips (1 of 2 here) but is directly relevant to Facebook’s misleading hate speech prevalence metrics (3-5% spun into 98%) and ineffectiveness of their AI solutions which @dseetharaman broke down so clearly in episode 7 of the Facebook Files podcast. /14
This exchange requires two clips (2 of 2 here) but is directly relevant to Facebook’s misleading hate speech prevalence metrics (3-5% spun into 98%) and ineffectiveness of their AI solutions which @dseetharaman broke down so clearly in episode 7 of the Facebook Files podcast. /15
Questions specific to January 6th insurrection and Facebook’s recommendation of Stop the Steal and civic groups overall. Davis gets surprisingly irritated at the simple question of whether or not the changes were made before or after the US election. /15
You can judge but Facebook’s Davis certainly seemed to lose her cool then catches herself when @DamianCollins pressed on Facebook’s January 6th timeline. We’ve been here before on other matters. /16
Worth also posting this exchange also with @DamianCollins drilling down on the May 26, 2020 WSJ report from @dseetharaman @JeffHorwitz report that “64% of all extremist group joins are due to recommendation tools.” Her answers are remarkable. /17

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More from @jason_kint

28 Oct
Stop. Please. Retweeting and dunking still serves to distract. Here is the reality - their market power and abuse were already evident before we saw evidence they knew about the harms. That includes January 6th insurrection and this highly questionable testimony this morning. 1/2
Global press is shining sunlight on how they serve to promote and accelerated the spread of harms. It’s critically important to focus on market power otherwise as in the past they’ll not be able to speak to the harms months later. /2
According to this evidence, Facebook put 4% of its profits towards safety and security. That’s $13B in five years compared to $275 Billion in profits. And that’s advertisers knowingly funding a platform that causes these harms. /3
Read 4 tweets
28 Oct
As we await 10am ET hearing with Facebook execs, three highlights from @mariaressa yesterday before the same committee. “…Move fast break things doesn’t work in the real world when your product insidiously manipulates people’s minds…” important questions on Facebook’s role. 1/3
Critically important point why Facebook would prefer lawmakers, journalists, public, debate content moderation, taking down, leaving up, when real concern should be market power, data, algorithmic amplification and how Facebook microtargets and filters content to audiences. 2/3
And why Nobel Peace Prize winner @mariaressa is a critical voice and a treasure who has acted as a beacon of light for those who seek to grow trust, protect democracy, and hold the line on press freedom so that we can we return more justice into the world. 3/3
Read 4 tweets
28 Oct
OK, US media, attention y’all. History lesson. In 2018-19, a parliamentary committee and chair was deceived by Facebook policy team kicking off FB’s most difficult period. Their vital work often didn’t get US coverage.
This same chair has must-watch hearing at 10a ET today. /1
Over 2yrs, that chair would become one of savviest lawmakers on planet regarding the issues while US Congress also began to get educated on them. @DamianCollins was smart enough on the issues that Zuckerberg and Sandberg refused summons on both sides of Atlantic to avoid him. /2
Their committee work was methodical yet broad enough to uncover facts, deeply probing and collaborative across parties leading to recommended changes in legislation now on the table and being examined by a joint select committee chaired by - you guessed it - MP Collins. /3
Read 8 tweets
26 Oct
And the Senate Commerce "We're not toxic like Facebook" hearing is underway. I'll thread thoughts here but having now read written testimony, Snap uniquely stands out as an "antidote" to the problems being uncovered in Facebook. /1
super interesting data point in Snap's written I don't think I've seen previously...throttling acceleration of velocity+reach for influencers until a human reviews it. "human-reviewed and moderated before it can be viewed by more than 25 people."
Opposite of FB's whitelist. /2
And Sen Blumenthal pops bubble by saying "we're not Facebook" isn't a good bar because that bar is "in the gutter." I do think nuance is important here. Tech and social media aren't de facto bad. There are clear distinctions in Google and Facebook's biz model and market power. /3
Read 11 tweets
26 Oct
Tuesday morning, critically important this week is keeping real and not allowing Facebook to set its own reality and then hack attention with rebrand and event this week. Everything should be in context of the 75+ news reports yesterday on what we’ve learned, the facts. /1
Politico podcast from @birnbaum_e has a corporate comms source describing Facebook as “flailing.” That’s probably more right than wrong with CEO’s rant on earnings suggesting we should want more companies like Facebook and its results for the world. /2 podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pol…
There is a 10am Senate Commerce (same Committee whistleblower testifies) hearing with TikTok, Snap, YouTube execs. Facebook is desperate to reshape issues to be about all social media but the entire hearing and coverage should be in context of differentiating from Facebook. /3
Read 8 tweets
25 Oct
this is a nauseating and embarrassing enthusiastic sales snow job by someone with absolutely zero remaining credibility or trust as a CEO of a major tech company let alone one the one with the greatest impact on global information, civil society and democracy. /1
I'm trying to keep track of his adversaries he's trying to paint and neuter with these prepared remarks:
So far I've logged:
- apple's privacy improvements
- the whistleblower's leaking
- free and plural press "coordinating"
- antitrust enforcers

GTFO with the metaverse. /2
Snap CEO supported Apple's privacy changes. Sheryl Sandberg is about to lay out all of the problems it's causing for the company while not supporting them and instead trying to still hug small business. Every word should be parsed. /3
Read 10 tweets

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