Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's chief executive and chairman, has held a conference call with reporters to discuss how the social network manages problematic posts and its community standards. The call quickly went sideways.
For more than an hour, the 34-year-old billionaire instead fielded questions about how he and his number two, Sheryl Sandberg, obfuscated problems such as Russian interference on Facebook and how the company had gone on the attack against rivals and critics.
In response, Zuckerberg, at times defiant and at times conciliatory, defended the social network, Sandberg, and his own record.
“The reality of running a company of more than 10,000 people is that you’re not going to know everything that’s going on,” he said at one point.
Yet even as Zuckerberg was making his case, a furore against his company was gathering momentum.
In Washington, Republicans and Democrats threatened to restrain Facebook through competition laws and to open investigations into possible campaign finance violations.
Shareholders ramped up calls to oust Zuckerberg as Facebook’s chairman. And activists filed a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission about the social network’s privacy policies and condemned Sandberg, the chief operating officer, for overseeing a campaign to secretly attack opponents.
The outcry followed a New York Times article that raised questions on Wednesday about Facebook’s tactics in dealing with disinformation and other problems on its site, as well as the way it treats competitors and opponents.
“Facebook cannot be trusted to regulate itself,” said Rep David Cicilline of Rhode Island, the top Democrat on the House antitrust subcommittee. “This staggering report makes clear that Facebook executives will always put their massive profits ahead of the interests of their customers.”
The social media giant has faced a succession of crises since 2016, when it was accused of influencing the outcome of the US presidential election in favour of Donald Trump.
Facebook has since acknowledged that its platform was a critical conduit for Russian interference in the 2016 campaign, and it has grappled with leaks of customer data to a British political consulting firm, Cambridge Analytica.
But while previous scrutiny of Facebook largely focused on its business model and how its platform promotes viral posts and ads, the latest fallout was directed specifically at Zuckerberg and Sandberg.
The New York Times article on Wednesday described how Zuckerberg and Sandberg passed off many critical security and policy decisions in recent years and delayed responses to abuse on Facebook or played down its significance.
More recently, Facebook went on the attack, employing other companies to divert attention to critics and competitors. In one case, an opposition research firm, Definers Public Affairs, worked to discredit protesters by trying to link them to George Soros, the liberal financier.
That has raised questions about the accountability of Zuckerberg and Sandberg. Zuckerberg exercises near total control of the social network because he owns 60 per cent of its voting shares and is the head of the board.
On Thursday, Facebook’s board said it supported Zuckerberg and Sandberg. While the board acknowledged that the two executives responded slowly to Russian interference on Facebook and that directors had pushed them to act faster, it said in a statement that “to suggest they knew about Russian interference and either tried to ignore it or prevent investigations into what had happened was grossly unfair.”
In his conference call, Zuckerberg echoed similar sentiments. “To suggest that we weren’t interested in knowing the truth, or to hide what we knew, is simply untrue,” he said. “We’re in a much stronger place today than we were in 2016.”
Still, he acknowledged missteps, including the use of Definers Public Affairs. Zuckerberg said he terminated Facebook’s relationship with Definers late on Wednesday after he learned about some of the opposition research firm’s tactics.
Zuckerberg said on the conference call that he was not willing to step down as chairman. “I don’t particularly think that that specific proposal is the right way to go,” he said. “But I am quite focused on ways to get more independence around our systems in different ways.”
Zuckerberg may have other trouble on his hands. Facebook, which has grown tremendously as a business in recent years, is dealing with a slowdown. And advertisers, the lifeblood of the company’s $40 billion business, are increasingly criticizing its tactics.
"Up to now, whatever you said about Facebook, you couldn't say it was a two-faced company," said Rishad Tobaccowala, chief growth officer for the Publicis Groupe, one of the world's biggest advertising groups.
But now it is clear that “it says one thing to you and does something completely different,” Tobaccowala said. “This is very hard if you are a marketer.”
In Washington, Republicans and Democrats alike blasted Facebook. Senator Rand Paul said in an interview on CNN that he was concerned over Facebook’s power as a “monopoly.”
Senator Amy Klobuchar said at a hearing on Capitol Hill that she planned to ask the Justice Department to investigate whether Facebook’s hiring of opposition research firms to influence politicians violated campaign finance rules. – New York Times Service