He should listen to his advertisers, many of who are halting marketing on the site until it can be cleaned up — but he’s said “these advertisers will be back on the platform soon enough.”
He met on Tuesday with a group of civil rights organizations, such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Anti-Defamation League and Color of Change. But he didn’t listen.
“All I was hearing was talk and no action,” said Jessica J. González, co-executive officer of Free Press in an interview. Ms. González was on the video call. “Facebook has what I call an appeasement strategy: Tell us what we need to hear, and Facebook can keep doing whatever they like. What they really need is a comprehensive sweep of the site of white supremacists, homophobes, anti-Semites and other hateful groups.”
Facebook’s auditors agreed. They found anti-Muslim speech rampant on the platform and that Facebook directed users to increasingly dangerous posts touting white nationalism. “Facebook has not yet publicly studied or acknowledged the particular ways anti-Muslim bigotry manifests on its platform,” they wrote.
The report also raises concerns about the possibility that the social media site itself is becoming a sort of radicalization engine. “Facebook should do everything in its power to prevent its tools and algorithms from driving people toward self-reinforcing echo chambers of extremism, and that the company must recognize that failure to do so can have dangerous (and life-threatening) real-world consequences.”
Take voting rights, which Mr. Trump has attempted to chip away at in social media posts, including falsely claiming that mail-in ballots lead to increased fraud. While Twitter appended the posts with fact-checking information, Facebook left them up unchanged and unchallenged. “Facebook has been far too reluctant to adopt strong rules to limit misinformation and voter suppression,” according to the report. “With less than five months before a presidential election, it confounds the auditors as to why Facebook has failed to grasp the urgency.” Voters could be forgiven for believing the president, but Facebook has said it’s yet another free speech issue.
Mr. Zuckerberg is either ignoring how the right to free speech works, or he fundamentally misunderstands it. It’s time for him to listen to First Amendment experts: They would tell him that, as a private corporation, Facebook can remove or tag any post it likes.