‘Facebook cannot be allowed to behave like a digital gangster’

U.K. parliamentary report calls for probe into recent elections

February 18, 2019 10:21 pm | Updated 10:21 pm IST - London

Damian Collins, chair of the parliamentary panel that gave the report.

Damian Collins, chair of the parliamentary panel that gave the report.

A scathing British parliamentary report on Monday referred to Facebook as a “digital gangster” that failed to fight the spread of fake news and violated data privacy. Lawmakers’ 18-month investigation into technology companies and disinformation also accused the world’s largest social media platform of trying to hide the extent of Russian interference in foreign elections.

Facebook is coming under attack over its response to Russia’s alleged use of misleading stories and targeted ads to sway the 2016 U.S. presidential election and a series of European votes.

Its executives have further been accused of trying to either hide or suppress emerging evidence of foreign meddling flagged by its engineers.

Parliamentary committee chair Damian Collins said Facebook “deliberately sought to frustrate our work by giving incomplete, disingenuous and at times misleading answers to our questions”.

‘Not beyond the law’

Facebook co-founder and chief Mark Zuckerberg turned down three requests to appear before the committee. “Companies like Facebook should not be allowed to behave like ‘digital gangsters’ in the online world, considering themselves to be ahead of and beyond the law,” the 108-page report said.

The committee urged a compulsory code of ethics for all tech companies that would be overseen by an independent U.K. regulator.

It said Facebook should be obliged to take down “sources of harmful content”. “We further recommend that the Government launches an independent investigation into past elections — including the U.K. election of 2017, the U.K. Referendum of 2016, and the Scottish Referendum of 2014 — to explore what actually happened with regard to foreign influence,” the report said.

Russia has denied either backing Britain's decision to leave the European Union or covertly backing pro-Brexit leaders during the 2016 referendum campaign.

Facebook spokesman Karim Palant said executives at the California company “share the committee’s concerns about false news and election integrity.”

But Mr. Collins said Facebook has only adopted incremental policy changes that were mostly aimed at fending off regulation making it liable for the spread of malicious stories. “They have taken a step, largely I think, to offset legislation,” Mr. Collins told BBC radio.

“It shouldn't be down to Mark Zuckerberg to determine what the code is for election advertising in the U.K. through Facebook.”

The committee had earlier found that Facebook’s engineers had flagged potentially malicious Russian activity as early as 2014 — long before it became public.

Monday’s report said the two Facebook officials who did testify “deliberately misled the committee or they were deliberately not briefed by senior executives at Facebook about the extent of Russian interference in foreign elections”.

The committee further accused Facebook of offering Netflix and other popular apps preferential access to people’s data even after it had tightened its privacy rules.

The British government has eight weeks to respond to the parliamentary report.

It is also expected to release a “white paper” next month that Mr. Collins said should form the basis for new legislation governing social media companies’ behaviour during election campaigns.

Britain is coming under pressure to follow Germany and France's example by introducing rules governing how Facebook collects user data and fights fake news.

Germany's competition authority said this month it will impose limits to how Facebook hoovers up data from its WhatsApp and Instagram subsidiaries.

And France has introduced laws requiring social media giants to take down malicious stories during election campaigns.

Mr. Collins said it would be up to parliament to determine what rules and punishments to impose. “There should be clear legal penalties in place — they could be fines, they could be something more serious than that,” he told BBC radio.

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