Lawmakers from nine different countries openly mocked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg for not attending a hearing in the UK.
On Tuesday, two dozen lawmakers from nine international parliaments for the inaugural “International Grand Committee on Disinformation.” The intended was to grill Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg over the company’s scandals involving fake news. While representatives from Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, France, Ireland, Latvia, Singapore, and the UK were in attendance, one individual was glaringly absent: Mark Zuckerberg.
The Facebook founder and CEO was asked to attend by the committee. The social media company sent its Vice President of Public Policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Richard Allan, in Zuckerberg’s place.
Allan was seated next to an empty chair designated for his boss for the entirety of the event. Facebook’s policy chief apologized to the committee for Zuckerberg’s absence. The Facebook founder’s decision to skip the hearing did not sit well with lawmakers.
9 countries.
24 official representatives.
447 million people represented.One question: where is Mark Zuckerberg? pic.twitter.com/BK3KrKvQf3
— Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee (@CommonsCMS) November 27, 2018
The international grand committee has come together to cross-examine Facebook on misinformation, fake news and undermining elections. I will be leading the questioning of Facebook policy VP Richard Allan. Mark Zuckerberg has ignored the summons to appear. #noshow pic.twitter.com/yZSY5zWSTH
— Charlie Angus NDP (@CharlieAngusNDP) November 27, 2018
“We’ve never seen anything quite like Facebook, where while we were playing on our phones and apps, our democratic institutions … seem to have been upended by frat boy billionaires from California,” said Charlie Angus, a representative from Canada.
At the committee meeting, one British lawmaker, Damian Collins, unveiled a new piece of information regarding unusual Russia-linked activity on Facebook. According to internal company documents, a Facebook engineer warned the social media giant of a data issue involving Russia in 2014 — earlier than Facebook has previously publicly admitted.
“An engineer at Facebook notified the company in October 2014 that entities with a Russian IP address were pulling 3 billion data points a day [from your website]. “
— 𝙋𝙖𝙩𝙧𝙞𝙘𝙠 𝙆𝙖𝙧𝙡𝙨𝙨𝙤𝙣
(@Patrickesque) November 27, 2018
“An engineer at Facebook notified the company in October 2014 that entities with Russian IP addresses had been using a Pinterest API key to pull over three billion data points a day through the Ordered Friends API,” said Collins.
Collins, who heads the British parliamentary committee on disinformation, made headlines this past weekend when he invoked a “” in order to obtain internal Facebook.
The British lawmaker has yet to release the internal Facebook documents, but claims he has full power to do so. The same documents are currently under a court seal in the U.S.
from Viral Trendy Update https://ift.tt/2DPaFZN
via IFTTT
0 Comments