Owners of Facebook stock were rebuffed on Thursday after they called
on company leaders to share more information about what they are doing
to address the circulation of fake news.

They asked the firm to prepare a report on the subject.
Facebook maintained a report was unnecessary and would not benefit the company.
The
proposal, presented at the firm's annual meeting, did not pass. That
was expected, since chief executive Mark Zuckerberg controls a majority
of the firm's voting power.
But Mr Zuckerberg addressed the issue
as part of his remarks, pointing to the steps the firm has already
taken, including making it harder for fake news spammers to make money
from ads.
The firm has said it is experimenting with its news feed
and testing new features to make it easier to report questionable
posts. It also announced plans to hire 3,000 more people to monitor
posts.
Mr Zuckerberg said the firm expects to invest more in artificial technology, but the technology is not "100% there yet".
"The right way to go about this problem is to fight information with more information," he added.
Facebook
faced a backlash after the 2016 US presidential election, when studies
found false news was widely viewed through the social media site.
Mr Zuckerberg was initially dismissive that fake news shaped the outcome of the election. But the firm has since conceded that it observed propaganda efforts by governments.
Natasha
Lamb of Arjuna Capital, who presented the fake news proposal at the
annual meeting, said Facebook cannot afford to think of itself as a
neutral platform.
She called the steps Facebook has taken "too little, too late".
"Investors seek assurance that fake news, fabricated content and hate speech is being handled responsibly over time," she said.
Company
leaders during the question and answer session said they knew fake news
was a turn-off for users. They said investors should expect more
announcements related to the issue.
No comments:
Post a Comment