Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Facebook Realises Internet Can Harm Democracy

IANS, 23 Jan, 2018 11:32 AM
    Facebook, which is striving hard to make its platform sanitised from fake news and echo chambers, has realised that it can't guarantee that social media is not harmful to democracy.
     
    In a blog post, Product Manager Samidh Chakrabarti said on Tuesday that he is not blind to the damage that the Internet can do to even a well-functioning democracy.
     
    "I wish I could guarantee that the positives are destined to outweigh the negatives, but I can't," Chakrabarti said.
     
    "That's why we have a moral duty to understand how these technologies are being used and what can be done to make communities like Facebook as representative, civil and trustworthy as possible," he added.
     
    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has also pledged to "fix" Facebook in 2018 by reducing hateful content and enhancing experience on his platform for over two billion users.
     
     
    "This is a new frontier and we don't pretend to have all the answers. But I promise you that my team and many more here are dedicated to this pursuit," said Chakrabarti who is responsible for politics and elections products globally.
     
    The 2016 US presidential election brought to the fore the risks of foreign meddling, "fake news" and political polarisation.
     
    "Around the US 2016 election, Russian entities set up and promoted fake Pages on Facebook to influence public sentiment -- essentially using social media as an information weapon," Chakrabarti noted.
     
    Facebook discovered that these Russian actors created 80,000 posts that reached around 126 million people in the US over a two-year period.
     
    "It's abhorrent to us that a nation-state used our platform to wage a cyberwar intended to divide society. This was a new kind of threat that we couldn't easily predict, but we should have done better," the post further read.
     
    The Russian interference worked in part by promoting inauthentic Pages, so "we're working to make politics on Facebook more transparent".
     
     
    "We're making it possible to visit an advertiser's Page and see the ads they're currently running. We'll soon also require organisations running election-related ads to confirm their identities so we can show viewers of their ads who exactly paid for them," Chakrabarti said.
     
    "Finally, we'll archive electoral ads and make them searchable to enhance accountability," he added.
     
    To make it easier to report false news, Facebook has taken steps in partnership with third-party fact checkers to rank these stories lower in News Feed.
     
    "Once our fact checking partners label a story as false, we're able to reduce future impressions of the story on Facebook by 80 per cent," Chakrabarti noted.
     
    One of the most common criticisms of social media is that it creates echo chambers where people only see viewpoints they agree with -- further driving us apart.
     
    "A better approach might be to show people many views, not just the opposing side. 
     
     
     
    "We recently started testing this idea with a feature called Related Articles that shows people articles with a range of perspectives on the news," Chakrabarti said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change
    TORONTO — Allowing long-term Canadian expats to vote in federal elections is not a Constitutional requirement but a policy decision that Parliament has the right to make, the government plans to tell the country's top court.

    Expat Voting Ban Legit, Liberal Government Argues Despite Promised Change

    University Groups Try To Stave Off Offensive Costumes In Lead-up To Halloween

    TORONTO — Geishas are out. Feathered headdresses are forbidden. And if you're planning to wear a Bill Cosby or Caitlyn Jenner costume, you may not be welcome at your Halloween party of choice.

    University Groups Try To Stave Off Offensive Costumes In Lead-up To Halloween

    World's Most Expensive Potato Chips Cost $11 A Piece, Come in Boxes of Five

    World's Most Expensive Potato Chips Cost $11 A Piece, Come in Boxes of Five
    In an attempt to create a special snack to go with their high quality beer, Sweetish brewery St. Erik's has created the world's most expensive potato chips.

    World's Most Expensive Potato Chips Cost $11 A Piece, Come in Boxes of Five

    Chinese Restaurant Adopts 'Pay What You Want' Policy, Loses $15,000 in a Week

    Chinese Restaurant Adopts 'Pay What You Want' Policy, Loses $15,000 in a Week
    A naive restaurant owner in Guiyang, China, who thought that appealing to people's inherent goodness would be a good way to attract customers to his new karst cave-themed restaurant, managed to lose over 100,000 RMB in just seven days.

    Chinese Restaurant Adopts 'Pay What You Want' Policy, Loses $15,000 in a Week

    World's Most Exclusive Social Network Charges Rich Snobs $1,000 a Month

    World's Most Exclusive Social Network Charges Rich Snobs $1,000 a Month
    Snobby rich kids sick of sharing the social media space with plebs can now sign up for the "world's most exclusive social network". It's even named after them and only costs $1,000 a month. What's not to like, right?

    World's Most Exclusive Social Network Charges Rich Snobs $1,000 a Month

    World’s Best Dressed Farmer Works the Fields Wearing Fancy Suit

    World’s Best Dressed Farmer Works the Fields Wearing Fancy Suit
    The idea of wearing a suit in the fields started as a joke. One day, at the dinner table, his brother joked about farming in an elegant suit, but Kyioto took it seriously.

    World’s Best Dressed Farmer Works the Fields Wearing Fancy Suit